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FROM  THE  LIBRARY  OF 


REV.    LOUIS    FITZGERALD    BENSON,   D.  D. 


BEQUEATHED   BY   HIM   TO 


THE   LIBRARY  OF 


PRINCETON  THEOLOGICAL  SEMINARY 


sec 


Digitized  by  the  Internet  Archive 

in  2011  with  funding  from 

Calvin  College 


http://www.archive.org/details/hymnsofagesseconOOwhit 


Uniform  with  this  Folume. 


HYMNS    OF   THE  AGES. 

FIRST    SERIES. 

Being  Seledtions  from  Lyra  Catholica,  Germanica,  Apof- 
tolica,  and  other  Sources.  With  an  Introdu6lion  by  Rev. 
F.  D.  Huntington,  D.  D.  Fifth  Edition.  One  volume. 
Price  $1.00. 

Fine  editions  of  this  vv^orlc,  the  Firft  and  Second  Series, 
printed  upon  large  paper,  and  bound  in  bevelled  boards. 
Price  $3.00  each. 

TICKNOR    AND    FIELDS. 


HYMNS    OF    THE    AGES. 


i)©s  tuiitis  simiM  (DdJBli's. 


HYMNS    OF    THE    AGES^ 


SECOND     SERIES. 


SELECTIONS  FROM  WITHER,  CRASHAW,   SOUTHWELL, 
HABINGTON,   AND  OTHER   SOURCES. 


"le^CM.- 


V 


Caroline,  S.  Whitmar^ln 


BOSTON: 
TICKNOR     AND     FIELDS. 

M  DCCC  LXI. 


Entered  according  to  Act  of  Congress,  in  the  year  i860. 

By  Ticknor  and  Fields, 

In  the  Clerk's  Office  of  the  District  Court  of  the  District  of  Massachusetts. 


KIVERSIIF,    CAMBRIDGE: 

Stereotvpeti     and    Printed     by 

H.     O.     HOUGHTON. 


PREFACE. 


THE  favor  with  which  the  first  series  of 
Hymns  of  the  Ages  was  received,  has  led 
us  to  prepare  a  second,  including,  with  hymns 
of  a  like  character,  many  others  which  the  plan 
of  that  forced  us  unwillingly  to  reject. 

For  the  previous  volume  we  sought  such  utter- 
ances as  in  their  gentle  mysticism  embodied  a 
religious  sentiment^  fitted  to  console  and  soothe, 
to  bind  up  broken  reeds :  in  the  present,  our  pur- 
pose being  rather  to  strengthen  the  reeds  that  they 
may  not  break,  and  haply  bend  them  into  use,  — 
we  have  given  with  less  sentiment,  more  religious 
thought. 

Because  both  of  their  obscurity  and  striking 
merit,    large    selections  are    presented    from    verse- 


VI 


Prefa 


writers  of  the  sixteenth  and  seventeenth  centuries, 
"  from  the  tender  and  earnest  numbers  of  South- 
well and  Crashaw  and  Habington,"  the  gentle 
symphonies  of  Vaughan,  the  rugged  verse  of 
Donne  and  Jeremy  Taylor,  from  the  quaint 
"  Church  Emblems "  of  Quarles,  and  the  volumi- 
nous "  Hallelujah "  of  Wither,  which  touched 
with  a  poetic  glow  each  object  of  every-day  life. 

For  the  rest,  we  have,  like  the  householder, 
brought  together  things  "  new  and  old : "  some 
of  the  latter  we  must  thank  the  German  writers 
for  pafling  on  to  us,  and  Miss  Winkworth  and 
others  for  translating.  We  are  also  indebted  to 
the  compilers  of  a  little  Scottish  Hymn  Book, 
which,  when  we  discovered  the  two  worn  vol- 
umes, had  been  through  a  score  of  editions  at 
Edinburgh. 

Choosing  irrespective  of  creed,  we  have  been 
often  guided  by  rare  and  deep  associations  of  the 
past;  hymns  there  are  here  which  have  been 
breathed  by  dying  lips,  traced  on  the  walls  of 
prisons,  sung  with  hushed  voices  in  catacombs, 
or  joyfully  chanted  on  the  battle-march,  or  fear- 
lessly at  the  stake. 


I 


Preface.  vii 

The  poet  Robert  Southwell,  when  in  prison 
awaiting  martyrdom  nearly  three  hundred  years 
ago,  wrote  thus  to  his  friend  :  "  We  have  sung 
the  canticles  of  the  Lord  in  a  strange  land,  and 
in    tliis    desert    we    have   sucked   honey    from    the 

rock,    and   oil    from    the    hard   stone ;    but " 

"  We  now  sow  the  seed  with  tears,  that  others 
hereafter  may  with  joy  carry  in  the  sheaves  to 
the  heavenly  granaries." 

The  martyr's  prophecy  has  seemed  to  us  near- 
ing  accomplishment,  as  in  the  course  ot  our 
pleasant  labor,  we  have  gone  back  gleaning  these 
precious   handfuls   which  the  years  let  fall. 


C.  s.  w. 
A.  E.  G. 


Roxbury,  July,    i860. 


1 


CONTENTS. 


PAGE 

ASPIRATION I 

VIRTUE 8 

TRUE    GAIN 15 

LOVE 25 

ACTIVE    DUTY 42 

SAINTS 64 

CONTENTMENT 74 

TRUST 93 

AFFLICTION 1x3 

PATIENCE 133 

PRAYER 152 

CHRIST 179 

GOD 209 

DEATH 235 

HEAVEN 279 

MISCELLANEOUS 297 


II 


HYMNS   OF   THE   AGES. 


ASPIRATION, 


THE   OFFERING. 

THEY  gave  to  Thee 
Myrrh,  frankincense  and  gold  ; 
But,  Lord,  with  what  fhall  we 
Present  ourselves  before  thy  majefty, 

Whom  Thou  redeemedft  when  we  were  sold  ? 
We  've  nothing  but  ourselves,  and  scarce  that  neither  ; 
Vile  dirt  and   clay  ; 
Yet  it  is  soft  and  may 
Impreflion  take. 
Accept  it.  Lord,  and  say,  this  Thou   hadft  rather; 
Stamp  it,  and  on  this  sordid  metal  make 
Thy  holy  image,  and  it  {hall  outfhine 
The  beauty  of  the  golden  mine.     Amen. 

'Jeremy   Taylor.      1 650. 


jispiration. 


PEACE. 

MY  soul,  there  is  a  countrie 
Afar  beyond  the  ftars, 
Where  ftands  a  winged  sentrie 

All  fkilfull  in  the  wars. 
There,  above  noise  and  danger. 

Sweet  Peace  sits  crown'd  with  smiles, 
And  One  born  in  a  manger 

Commands  the  beauteous  files. 
He  is  thy  gracious  friend 

And   (O   my  soul,  awake  !) 
Did  in  pure  love  descend. 

To  die  here  for  thy  sake. 
If  thou  canft  get  but  thither. 

There  growes  the  flowre  of  peace. 
The  rose  that  cannot  wither, 

Thy  fortrelTe,  and  thy  ease. 
Leave,  then,  thy  foolilh  ranges  ; 

For  none  can  thee  secure 
But  One,  who  never  changes, 

Thy  God,  thy  Life,  thy  Cure. 

Henry  Vaughan.      162 1— 1695. 


Aspiration. 


OLOVE  divine,   how  sweet  thou  art! 
When  fhall  I  find  my  willing  heart 
All  taken   up  by  thee  ? 
I   thirft,  and  faint,   and  die  to  prove, 
The  greatnefs  of  redeeming  love,  — 
The  love  of  Chrift  to  me. 

He  only  knows  the  love  of  God; 
O   that  it  now  were  fhed   abroad 

In  this  poor  ftony  heart ! 
For  love  I  figh,  for  love  I   pine  ; 
This  only  portion,  Lord,  be   mine  ; 

Be  mine  this  better  part. 

O  that  I  could  forever  fit. 

With  Mary,  at  the  Aiafter's  feet  ! 

Be  this   my   happy  choice  ; 
My  only   care,  delight,  and  blifs, 
My  joy,  my  heaven  on   earth,   be  this,  — 

To  hear  the  Bridegroom's  voice. 

O  that,  with  humbled   Peter,    I 
Could  weep,   believe,  and  thrice  reply, 

My  faithfulnefs  to  prove. 
Thou  know'ft:,  (for  all  to  Thee  is  known. 
Thou  know'ft,  O  Lord,  and  Thou  alone, 

Thou  know'ft  that  Thee  I  love. 


Aspiration. 

O  that  I  could,  with  favor'd  John, 
Recline  my  weary  head  upon 

The  dear  Redeemer's  breaft  ! 
From  care,  and  fin,  and  sorrow  free. 
Give  me,  O  Lord,  to  find  in  Thee 

My  everlafting  reft. 

Thy  only   love  do  I  require. 
Nothing  in  earth  beneath   defire, 

Nothing  in  heaven  above  ; 
Let  earth,  and  heaven,  and  all  things  go, 
Give  me  Thy  only  love  to  know. 

Give  me  Thy  only  love. 

Charles  Wesley. 


■***©^^©***" 


THE   ANSWER. 

"    A    LLAH,  Allah  !  "  cried  the  fick  man,  racked  with 

JTx^     pain  the  long  night  through  ; 
Till  with  prayer  his   heart  grew  tender,  till  his  lips  like 
honey  grew. 


But  at  morning  came  the  Tempter  ;  said,  "  Call   louder, 

child  of  Pain  ! 
See  if  Allah  ever  hear,  or  answers,  '  Here  am  I,'  again." 


Aspiration.  5 

Like  a  ftab,  the  cruel   cavil  through  his  brain  and  pulses 

went  ; 
To    his    heart  an   icy   coldnefs,  to   his   brain  a   darknefs, 

sent. 

Then,   before  him,  ftands  Elias  j  says,   "  My  child,  why 

thus  dismayed  ? 
Doft   repent    thy  former  fervor  ?     Is  thy  soul  of  prayer 

afraid  ?  " 

"  Ah !  "   he   cried,   "  I  've   called  so  often  ;   never   heard 

the  '  Here  am  I ' ; 
And    I    thought,  God   will    not   pity  ;    will   not   turn   on 

me  his  eye." 

Then    the    grave    Elias    answered,    "God    said,    '  Rise, 

Elias  ;  go 
Speak  to  him,  the  sorely  tempted  ;  lift  him  from  his  gulf 

of  woe. 

"  '  Tell  him  that  his  very  longing   is   itself  an   answering 

cry; 
That    HIS    prayer,    "  Come,    gracious    Allah !  "     is    My 

answer,  "  Here  am  I."  ' 


Every  inmoft  aspiration  is  God's  angel  undefiled  ; 
And  in  every  '  O   my  Father !  '   {lumbers   deep  a  'Here, 
mv  child.' 

Dscheladeddin . 
TholucFs  verfion.      Tranjlated  by  Rev.   James   F.    Clarke. 


Aspiration. 


CHEAP   MEDICINE. 

THAT  which   makes  us   have  no  need 
Of  phyfic,  that 's  phyfic  indeed. 
Hark,  hither,  reader  !   wilt  thou  see 
Nature  her  own  phyfician  be  ? 
Wilt  see  a  man,  all  his  own   wealth, 
His  own  mufic,  his  own  health  ; 
A  man   whose  sober  soul  can  tell 
How  to  wear  her  garments  well  j 
Her  garments  that  upon  her  fit, 
As  garments  fliould   do,  close  and   fit  ; 
A  well-cloth'd   soul  that's  not  opprefT'd 
Nor  chok'd  with  what  fhe   fhould   be  drefT'd  ;  — 
A  soul  fheath'd  in  a  cryftal  fhrine, 
Through  which  all  her  bright  features   fhine  ; 
As  when  a  piece  of  wanton  lawn, 
A  thin,  aerial  veil,  .is  drawn 
O'er  beauty's  face,  seeming  to  hide. 
More  sweetly  fliows  the  blufhing  bride  ; 
A  soul,  whose  intelleilual  beams 
No  mifts   do  mafk,  no  lazy  ftreams  ; 
A  happy  soul,  that  all  the  way 
To  heaven  rides   in  a  summer's  day  .? 
Would'ft  see  a  man,  whose  well -warmed  blood 
i3athes  him  in  a  genuine   flood  ? 
A  man  whose  tundd  humors  be 


Aspiration.  7 

A   seat  of  rareft  harmony  ? 

Would'ft  see  blithe  looks,   frefh  cheeks  beguile 

Age  ?      Would'ft  see  December  smile  ? 

Would'ft  see  nefts  of  new  roses  grow 

In  a  bed  of  reverend  snow  ?  — 

Warm  thoughts,   free  spirits  flattering 

Winter's   self  into  a  spring  ? 

In  sum,  would'ft  see   a  man  that  can 

Live  to  be  old  —  and  ftill  a  man? 

Whose  lateft  and  moft  leaden  hours 

Fall  with  soft  wings,  ftuck  with  soft  flowers  ; 

And  when  life's  sweet  fable  ends, 

Soul  and  body  part  like  friends  ; 

No  quarrels,  murmurs,  no  delay  j 

A  kiss,  a  figh,  and  so  away  ? 

This  rare  one,  reader,  would'ft  thou  see  ? 

Hark  hither  !   and  thyself  be  he. 

Kicharcl  Crajhaw.      1637—165), 


'9' 


Virtue. 


VIRTUE. 


*®^5®^*** 


IF  Virtue  be  thy  guide, 
True  comfort  is  thy  path, 
And  thou  secure  from  erring  fteps, 
That  lead  to  vengeance  wrath. 

Not  wideft  open  door. 

Nor  spacious  ways  fhe  goes  ; 

To  ftraight  and  narrow  gate  and  way, 
She  calls,  flie  leads,  {he  fhows. 

She  calls,  the  feweft  come  ; 

She  leads  the  humble  spirited  ; 
She   {hows  them  reft  at  race's  end, 

Soul's  refl  to  heaven  invited. 


'T  is  fhe  that  offers  moft  j 

' T  is   {lie  that  moft  refuse  ; 
'T  is  fhe   prevents  the  broad  way  plagues. 

Which   moft  do  wilful  choose. 


Firtue.  9 

Do  choose  the  wide,  the  broad, 

The  left-hand   way  and  gate  : 
These  Vice  applauds,  these   Virtue  loathes, 

And  teacheth  hers  to  hate. 

Her  ways  are  pleasant  ways, 

Upon   the  right-hand  fide ; 
And  heavenly  happy  is  that  soul 

Takes  Virtue  for  her  guide. 

Robert  Southwell.      1562— 1569. 


WALKING    IN    LIGHT. 


WALK  in  the  light! — So  fhalt  thou  know 
That  fellowfhip  of  love, 
His   Spirit  only   can  beftow, 
Who  reigns  in  light  above  ! 

Walk  in  the  light  !  —  And  fin,  abhorred. 

Shall  ne'er  defile  again  ; 
The  blood  of  Jesus  Chrift  our  Lord 

Shall  cleanse  from  every  ftain  ! 

Walk  in  the  light  !  —  And  thou  fhalt  find 

Thy  heart  made  truly  His, 
Who  dwells  in  cloudlefs  light  enfhrined, 

In  whom  no  darknefs  is  ! 


10  Virtue. 

Walk  in  the  light! — And  thou  fhalt  own 

Thy  darknefs  pafied  away, 
Because  that  light  hath  on  thee  {hone, 

In  which  is  perfect:  day! 

Walk  in  the  light!  —  And  even  the  tomb 

No  fearful  fliade  fhall  wear ; 
Glory  fhall  chase  away  its  gloom. 
For  Chrift  hath  conquered  there! 

Walk  in  the  light  I  —  And  tliou  fhalt  see 

A  path,  though  thorny,  bright ; 
For  God,  by  grace,  fhall  dwell  in  thee, 

And  God  Himself  is  light ! 

Barton. 

— e©^— 


VEIL,  Lord,  mine  eyes  till  fhe  be  part, 
When  Folly  tempts  my  fight ; 
Keep  Thou  my  palate  and  my  tafte 

From  gluttonous  delight. 
Stop  Thou  mine  ear  from  syrens'  songs, 

My  tongue   from  lies  reftrain  j 
Withhold  my  hands  from  doing  wrongs, 
My  feet  from  courses  vain  : 

Teach,  likewise,  ev'ry  other  sense 
To  a6l  an  honeft  part, 


Virtue. 


1  I 


But  chiefly  settle  innocence 

And  purenefs   in  my  heart  : 
So  nought  without  me  or  within, 

Shall  work  an  ill  effecSl, 
By  tempting  me  to  a6l  a  fin, 

Or  virtues  to  negle6l. 

George  Wither.      1 588-1 667. 


FAME. 


WHAT  fhall  I  do  left  life  in  filence  pafs  ? 
And  if  it  do, 
And  never  prompt  the  bray  of  noisy  brafs, 

What  need'ft  thou  rue  ? 
Remember,  aye  the  Ocean  deeps  are  mute  ; 

The  fhallows   ruar  ; 
Worth  is  the  Ocean  —  Fame  is  but  the  bruit 
Alonof  the  fhore. 


What  fhall   I  do  to  be   forever  known  ? 

Thy  duty  ever. 
This  did   full  many  who  yet  flept  unknown,  — 

Oh  !   never,  never  ! 
Think'ft  thou  perchance,  that  they  remain   unknown 

Whom  thou  know'ft  not  ? 
By  angel-trumps  in   heaven  their  praise  is  blown,  — 

Divine   their  lot. 


1 2  Virtue. 

What  fhall  I   do  to  gain   eternal  life  ? 

Discharge  aright 
The  fimple  dues  with  which  each  day  is  rife  ? 

Yea,  with  thy  might. 
Ere  perfe6l  scheme  of  a6lion  thou  devise 

Will  life  be  fled, 
While  he,  who  ever  acts  as  conscience  cries. 

Shall  live,  though  dead. 

From  Schiller. 


HIDDEN   GROWTH. 

DEAR,  secret  greennefs  !  nurft  below 
Tempefls  and  windes  and  winter-nights ! 
Vex  not,  that  but  One  sees   thee  grow ; 
That  One  made  all  these  lefler  lights. 

What  needs  a  conscience  calm  and  bright 

Within  itself,  an  outward  tefl  ? 
Who  breaks  his  glafs  to  take  more  light. 

Makes  way  for  ftorms  into  his  reft. 

Then  blefs  thy  secret  growth,  nor  catch 
At  noise,  but  thrive  unseen  and  dumb  ; 

Keep   clean,  bear  fruit,  earn  life,  and  watch 
Till  the  white-winged  reapers  come ! 

Vauzhan. 


Firtue.  1 3 


THE   RIVER   OF   LIFE. 

THERE  is  a  pure  and  peaceful  wave, 
That  rolls  around  the  throne  of  love, 
Whose  waters  gladden  as  they  lave 

The  peaceful   ihores  above. 

While  flreams  which  on  that  tide  depend, 
Steal  from  those  heavenly  fhores  away, 
And  on  this  desert  world  descend, 

O'er  weary  lands  to  flray  ; 

The  pilgrim,  faint,  and  nigh  to  fink 
Beneath  his  load  of  earthly  woe, 
Refrelhed  befide  their  verdant   brink, 
Rejoices  in  their  flow. 

There,  O   my  soul,  do  thou  repair. 
And  hover  o'er  the  hallowed  spring. 
To  drink  the  cryftal  wave,  and  there 

To  lave  thy  wearied  wing. 

There  droop  that  wing,  when  far  it  flies 
From  human  care,  and  toil,  and  ftrife, 
And  feed  by  those  flill  flreams  that  rise 
Beneath  the  tree  of  life. 


'4 


Firtue. 


It  may  be  that  the  waft  of  love 

Some  leaves  on  that  pure  tide  has  driven, 

Which,  paffing  from  the   fhores  above. 

Have  floated  down  from  heaven. 

So  fhall   thy  wounds  and   woes  be  healed 
By  the  bleft  virtue  that  they  bring  ; 
So   thy  parched  lips  fhall  be  unsealed, 

Thy  Saviour's  praise  to  fing. 


-J 


True   Gain.  i  5 


TRUE    GAIN. 

SOUL   AND    BODY. 

POOR  soul,  the  centre  of  my  finful  earth, 
Foiled  by  those  rebel  powers  that  thee  array, 
Why  doft  thou  pine  within,  and  suffer  dearth, 
Painting  thy  outward  walls  so  coftly  gay  ? 
Why  so  large  coft,   having  so  fhort  a  lease, 
Doft  thou  upon  thy  fading  manfion  spend  ? 
Shall  worms,  inheritors  of  this  excefs, 
Eat  up  thy  charge  ?     Is  this  thy  body's  end  ? 
Then,   soul,  live  thou  upon  thy  servant's  lofs, 
And  let  that   pine  to  aggravate  thy  ftore  ! 
Buy  terms  divine  in  selling   hours  of  drofs  ! 
Within  be  fed,  without  be  rich  no  more  ! 
So  fhalt  thou  feed  on  death,  that  feeds  on  men, 
And,  death  once  dead,  there's  no  more  dying  then. 

Shakspeare. 


1 6  True  Gain. 


SOMETIME,  O  Lord  !  at  leaft  in  fhow, 
A  thankful  heart  we  do  profefs, 
When  Thou  such  bleflings  doft  beftow, 
As  outward  riches,  health,  or  peace  ; 
But    for  that  means  which   may  conduce 
Our  souls  to  their  true  blifs  to  raise, 
We  make  not  very  frequent  use 
Of  thankful  words,  or  hymns  of  praise. 

O  God  !   forgive  this  crying  fin. 
More  wise,  more  thankful,  let  us  grow. 
To  mend  this  fault  let  us  begin, 
And  grace  obtain  more  grace  to  fhow : 
For  corn,  and  wine,  and  oil's  increase, 
A  body  sound,  a  witty  brain, 
A   free  eftate,  an  outward  peace, 
Without  this  blefling  were  in  vain. 

George  Wither. 


True  Gain. 


,'7 


TRAVELS    AT   HOME. 


OP^T  have  I  wifhed  a  traveller  to  be  : 
Mine  eyes  did  even  itch  the  fights  to  see 
That  I  had  heard  and  read  of.      Oft  I  have 
Been  greedy  of  occafion,  as  the  grave, 
That  never  says  enough  ;   yet  ftill  vv^as  crofTed 
When   opportunities   had   promised   moft. 
At  laft   I   said,   What   mean'll:  thou,   wandering  elf 
To  ftraggle  thus  ?   go,   travel  firft  thyself. 
Thy  little  world  can  fhew  thee  wonders  great : 
The  greater  may  have  more,   but  not  more  neat 
And  curious   pieces.      Search,  and  thou   fhalt  find 
Enough  to  talk  of.      If  thou  wilt,  thy  mind 
Europe  supplies,  and   Afia  thy  will, 
And  Afric  thine  affe6lions.      And  if  ftill 
Thou  lift  to  travel   further,  put  thy  senses 
For  both  the  Indies.     Make  no  more  pretences 
Of  new  discoveries,  whilft  yet  thine  own 
And  neareft  little  world  is  ftill   unknown. 
Away,  then,  with  thy  quadrants,  compafTes, 
Globes,  tables,  cards,  and   maps,   and   minute  glafles 
Lay  by  thy  journals  and  thy  diaries  ! 
Close  up  thy  annals  and  thy  hiftories  ! 
Study   thyself,   and  read   what  thou   haft  writ 
In  thine  own  book, —  thy  conscience!      Is  it   fit 


iB  True    Gain. 

To  labor  after  other  knowledge  so, 
And  thine  own  neareft,   deareft  self  not  know  ? 
Travels  abroad  both  dear  and  dangerous  are, 
Whilft  oft  the  soul  pays  for  the  body's  fare. 
Travels  at  home  are  cheap  and   safe.     Salvation 
Comes  mounted  on  the  wings  of  meditation. 

He  that  doth  live  at  home,  and  learns  to  know 
God  and  himself,  needeth  no  further  go. 

Chrijiopher  Harvey. 


WHY  doth  ambition  so  the  mind  diftrefie 
To  make  us  scorne  what  we  pofTeffe, 
And  look  so  farre  before  us,  fince  all   we 

Can   hope,  is  varied   misery  ? 
Goe  find  some  whispering  fhade  neare  Arne  or    Po, 

And  gently  'mong  their  violets  throw 
Your  weary'd  limbs,  and  see  if  all  those   faire 

Enchantments  can  charme   griefe  or   care. 
Our  sorrowes  ftill  pursue  us  ;  and  when  you 

The  ruin'd  capitol  fhall  view. 
And    ftatues,  a  disorder'd  heape  ;  you  can 

Not  cure  yet  the  disease  of  man, 
i\nd  banifh   your  owne  thoughts.     Go  travaile  where 

Another  Sun  and   flarres  appeare. 


Gai 


19 


And  land  not  toucht  by  any  covetous  fleet, 

And  yet  even  there  yourself  you'll  meete. 
Stay  here  then,  and  while  curious  exiles  find 

New  toyes  for  a  fantaftique  mind, 
Enjoy  at  home  what's  reall :   here  the  Spring 

By  her  aeriall  quires  doth  fing 
As  sweetly  to  you,  as   if  you  were  laid 

Vnder  the  learn'd  ThefTalian  fhade. 
Dire6l  your  eyefight  inward,  and  you'll  find 

A  thousand  regions  in  your  mind 
Yet  undiscover'd.     Travell  them,  and  be 

Expert  in  home  cosmographie. 
This  you  may  doe  safe  both  from  rocke  and  fhelfe 

Man's  a  whole  world  within  himselfe. 

Habington.      160  5- 1654. 


20  True  Gain. 


THOUGHT. 

COA4PANION  none  is  like 
Unto  the  mind  alone, 
For  many  have  been  harmed  by  speech, — 

Through  thinking,  itv^.,  or  none. 
Fear  oftentimes  reftraineth  words, 

But  makes  not  thoughts  to  cease  ; 
And  he  speaks  beft,  that  hath  the  fkill 
When  for  to  hold  his  peace. 

Our  wealth  leaves  us  at  death, 

Our   kinsmen  at  the  grave. 
But  virtues  of  the  mind  unto 

The  heavens  with   us  we  have  ; 
Wherefore,   for  virtue's  sake, 

I  can  be  well  content 
The  sweeteft  time  of  all  my  life 

To  deem  in  thinking  spent. 

Lord  Vaux.     Died  in  1555. 


21 


THE   PILGRIM. 

GIVE  me  my  scallop-fhell  of  quiet, 
My  ftaflF  of  faith  to  walk  upon  ; 
My  scrip  of  joy,  immortal  diet ; 
My  bottle  of  salvation  ; 
My  gown  of  glory  (hope's  true  gage), 
And   thus   I'll  take  my  pilgrimage. 
Blood  muft  be  my  body's  only  balmer 
Whilfl:  my  soul,   like  a  quiet  Palmer, 
Travelleth  towards  the  land  of  Heaven  ; 
No  other  balm  will  there  be  given. 

Sir  Walter  Raleigh.    1522-16 1 8. 


BUT  what,  or  who  are  we  [alas] 
That  we  in  giving  are  so  free  ! 
Thine  own  before  our  offering  was. 
And  all  we  have  we  have  from  thee. 
For  we  are  guefts  and  ftrangers  here, 
As  were  our   fathers   in  thy  fight ; 
Our  days   but  fhadow-like  appear, 
And  suddenly  they  take  their  flight. 

George  Wither, 


22 


TRUE   RICHES. 

In  vain  do  men 
The  heavens  of  their  fortunes'   fault  accuse, 

Sith   they  know  beft  what  is  the  beft  for  them  ; 
For  they  to  each  such  fortune  do  diffuse 
As   they  do  know  each  can  moft   aptly  use. 

For  not  that  which  men  covet  moft  is  beft, 

Nor  that  thing  worft  which   men  do  moft  refuse  ; 

But  fitteft  is,  that  all  contented  reft 

With  that  they  hold  ;  each  hath  his  fortune  in   his  breaft. 

It  is  the  mind  that  maketh  good  or  ill, 

That   maketh  wretch  or  happy,  rich   or  poor ; 
For  some  that  hath  abundance  at  his  will. 

Hath  not  enough  ;  but  wants  in  greater  ftore  ; 

And  other,  that  hath  little,  afks  no  more. 
But  in  that  little  is  both  rich  and  wise  ; 

For  wisdom  is  moft  riches  :   fools  therefore 
They  are  which   fortune  do  by   vows  devise, 
Sith  each   unto  himself  his  life  may  fortunize. 

Spenser.     15  53- 1599. 


L 


True   Gain. 


23 


WHEN   WE   PUT   OFF   OUR   APPAREL. 

AS  ere  I  down   am  couched  there, 
Where  now  I  hope  to  reft, 
I  firft  from  what  I  daily  wear, 

Begin  to  be  undreft  ; 
So  in   my  grave  ere  I  fhall  be 

In  bleft  reposure  laid. 
Of  many  rags  yet  worn  by  me 
I   muft  be  disarray'd. 

My  fruitlefs  hopes,  my  foolifh  fears, 

My  luft,  my  lofty  pride. 
My  flefhly  joys,  my  needlefs  cares, 

Muft  quite   be  laid   afide. 
Yea,  that  self-love  which  yet  I   wear 

More  near  me  than  my  fkin, 
Muft  off"  be  pluclc'd  ere  I  fhall  dare 

My  laft  long  fleep  begin. 


Of  these  and   all   such  rags  as  these, 

When  I  am  disarray'd. 
My  soul  and  body  ftiall  have  ease. 

Wherever  I  am  laid  : 
Nor  fears  of  death,  nor  cares  of  life. 

Shall  then   disquiet  me  ; 


24  True  Gain. 

Nor  dreaming  joys,  nor  waking  grief, 
My  fleep's  dilturbance  be. 

Therefore  inftru(5l  Thou  me,   O   God  ! 

And  give  me  grace  to  heed 
With  what  vain   things  ourselves  we  load, 

And  what  we  rather  need. 
Oh,  help  me  tear  those  clouts  away. 

And  let  them  so  be  loathed  ; 
That  I  on  my  laft  rifing  day 

With  glory   may  be  clothed. 

And  now  when  I  am  naked  laid, 

Vouchsafe   me  so  to  arm, 
That  nothing  make  my  heart  afraid, 

Or  do   my  body  harm. 
And  guard   me  so  when  down   I  lie. 

And  when  I  rise  again  ; 
That  fleep  or  wake,  or  live  or  die, 

I   ftill   may  safe  remain. 

George  Wither.      1588-1667. 


I 


25 


LOVE. 

-«'©®**"— 
LOVE. 

TILL  love  appear,  we  live  in  anxious  doubt ; 
But  smoke  vv^ill  vanifh  w^hen  that  flame  breaks  out  ; 
This  is   the  fire  that  would  consume  our  drofs, 
Refine   and  make  us  richer  by  the  lofs. 
Could  we  forbear  dispute  and  prailise  love, 
We  fhould  agree  as  angels  do  above. 
Where  love  prefides,  not  vice  alone  does  find 
No  entrance  there,  but  virtues  ftay  behind. 
Both  Faith  and  Hope,  and   all  the  meaner  train 
Of  moral  virtues,  at  the  door  remain  ; 
Love  only  enters  as   a  native  there. 
For,  born  in  heaven,  it  does  but  sojourn  here. 
Weak  though   we  are,  to  love  is  no  hard  taflc. 
And  love  for  love  is  all  that  Heaven   does  afk. 
Love,  that  would  all  men  juft  and  temperate  make. 
Kind  to  themselves  and  others,   for  his  sake. 
'T  is  with  our  minds  as  with  a  fertile  ground, 
Wanting  this  love,  they  muft  with  weeds  abound  : 
Unruly  paflions,  whose  efFeils  are  worse 
Than  thorns  and  thirties  springing  from  the  curse. 

Edinund  Waller.      1 605- 1687. 


26 


LITTLE   CHILDREN. 

LOVE  divine  its  word  hath   spoken ; 
Hath  its  life  exprefl'ed  ;  — 
To  the  earneft,  seeking  spirit, 

It  hath  given  a  teft, 
Marking  the   inheritors 

Of  its  heavenly  reft. 
Oh,  the  blefling,  the  rich   blefling  ! 

Is  it  thine  and  mine  ? 
Who  are  they,  the  true  recipients 

Of  the  Love  Divine  ? 
Little  children,  little  children  ! 

Not  in  years  alone  — - 
Little  children  in  the  spirit. 

These  He  calls   his  own. 


Have  ve  love,  like  little  children  ? 

Have  ye  faith  as  they  ? 
Do  your  angels,  near  the  Father, 

See  his  face  alway  ? 
Then  are  ye  within  the  kingdom ! 

Hold  the  blefling  up ! 
This  the  "  myftic  hydrome  " 

In   life's  golden  cup. 
' T  was  overturned  when  Eden's  exiles 

Closed  the  garden  door. 


27 


But  refilled   again,  forever 

Running  o'er  and   o'er, 
With  a  new,  divine  elixir, 

Emanating   power, 
Circling  life  with  noble  meaning 

And   angelic  lore, 
When  the  Holy  Dove  descended 

Upon  Jordan's   fliore. 

Little  children,  young  and   aged. 

Bear  the  blefling  up  ! 
Pour  around  the  life  elixir. 

From  your  golden  cup  ! 
Love  is  the  divine  reftorer 

Of   the    souls   of  men  ; 
This  the  new,  perpetual  Eden 

We  mufl  seek  again. 
Love  is  the  eternal  childhood  ; 

Hither  all  muft  come, 
Who  the  kingdom  would  inherit 

Of  the  Heavenly  Home. 


28 


WHEN   KINDRED    MEET   TOGETHER. 

HOW  happy  is   it  and  how  sweet, 
When  kindred   kind  appear  ! 
And  when  in   unity  we  meet 

As  we  obliged  are ! 
Each  blefling  which  on  one  doth  fall, 

Will   multiplied  be  ; 
And  prove  a  blefling  to  us  all. 
As  long  as  we  agree. 

As  from  high  hills  a  fhower  of  rain 

Along  the  valleys  trills, 
And  as  they  vapour  up  again 

A  moift'ning  for  those  hills  : 
So  kindred,  whether  poor  or  rich. 

If  truly  kind  they  prove. 
Each  other  may  advantage   much. 

By  interchange  of  love. 


The  flendereft  threads  together  wound, 
Will  make  the  ftrongeft  band  ; 

And  smalleft  rods,  if  closely  bound. 
The  bender's  force  withftand. 


29 


But  if  we  those  asunder  take, 
Their  ftrength   departs  away  ; 

And  what  a  giant  could  not  break, 
A  little  infant  may. 

So  if  in  concord  we  abide, 

If  true  in  heart  we  prove, 
We  may  the  more  be  fortified 

By  interchange  of  love. 
Let  us  therefore,  who  now  have  met. 

Observe  this  lefibn  so. 
That  we  do  not  the  same  forget. 

When  we  apart  fhall  go. 


Let  none  of  us  delight  to  tell, 

Or  pleasure  take  to  hear. 
Wherein  his   kinsman  doth  not  well. 

Or  faulty  may  appear. 
But  let  each  of  us  our  own  crimes. 

With  others'   errors  weigh  ; 
And  seek  the  fitteft  means  and  times, 

To  mend  them  what  we  may. 

If  malice  injure  any  one 

To  whom  allied  we  are. 
Let  us  repute  the  wrong  as  done 

To  every  person   here. 
Yea,  if  a  grief,  a  lofs,  a  fhame. 

To  one  of  us  befall  ; 
Let   us  be  tender  of  the  same. 

As  grievous  to  us  all. 


30 


So  we  that  are  but  linked  yet 

In  bands  of  common  kind, 
Shall  at  the  laft  be  nearer  knit 

By  virtues  of  the  mind. 
And  when  the  ties  of  carnal  kin 

By  death  fliall  be   undone  ; 
We  that  have  so  allied  been, 

Shall   be  forever  one. 


George  Wither. 


THERE  is  a  plant  that  in  its  cell 
All  trembling  seems  to  flrand, 
And  bends  its  ftalk,  and   folds  its  leaves 
From  each  approaching  hand  : 

And  thus  there  is  a  conscious  nerve 

Within  the  human  breaft, 
That  from  the  rafh  and  carelefs  hand 

Sinks  and  retires  diftreft. 

The  preflure  rude,  the  touch  severe, 

Will  raise  within  the  mind 
A  namelefs   thrill,  a  secret  tear, 

A  torture  undefined. 

Oh,  you  who  are  by  nature  form'd 
Each   thought  refined   to   know  ! 


Love.  31 

Reprefs  the  word,  the  glance,  that  wakes 
That  trembling  nerve  to  woe. 

And  be  it  ftill  your  joy  to  raise 

The  trembler  from  the  fhade, 
To  bind  the   broken,  and  to  heal 

The  wound  you  never  made. 

Whene'er  you  see  the  feeling  mind, 

Oh,  let  this   care  begin  ; 
And  though  the  cell  be   ne'er  so  low, 

Respe6l  the  gueft  within. 

Lydia  Huntley. 


32  Lc 


CHARITY. 

BREATHE  thoughts  of  pity  o'er  a  brother's  fall, 
But  dwell  not  with  flern  anger  on  his  fault : 
The  grace  of  God  alone  holds  thee,   holds  all ; 

Were   that  withdrawn,  thou  too  would'ft  swerve  and   halt. 

Send  back  the  wanderer  to  the  Saviour's  fold, — 

That  were  an  a6lion  worthy  of  a  saint ; 
But  not  in  malice   let  the  crime  be  told. 

Nor  publifh  to  the  world  the  evil  taint. 

The  Saviour  suffers   when  his  children  Aide  ; 

Then  is  his  holy  name  by   men  blasphemed  ! 
And  he  afrefh  is  mocked  and  crucified, 

Even  by  those  his  bitter  death  redeemed. 

Rebuke  the  fin,  and  yet  in  love  rebuke  ; 

Feel  as  one  member  in  another's  pain  ; 
Win  back  the  soul  that  his  fair  path  forsook. 

And  mighty  and  eternal  is  thy  gain. 

Ed?neJion. 


31 


ANGELIC   MINISTRY. 

AND   is   there  care  in   Heaven  ?      And  is  there  love 
In  heavenly  spirits  to  these  creatures  base, 
That   may  compaillon  of  their  evils  move  ? 
There  is,  —  else  much  more  wretched  were  the  case 
Of  men  than  beafts  :   but  O  !   the  exceeding  grace 
Of  higheft  God,  that  loves   His  creatures  so, 
And  all  His  works   with  mercy  doth  embrace. 
That  blefled  angels  He  sends  to  and   fro, 
To  serve  to  wicked   man,  to  serve  His  wicked  foe  ! 


How  oft  do  they  their  filver  bowers  leave. 

To  come  to  succor  us  that  succor  want ! 

How  oft  do  they  with   golden  pinions  cleave 

The  flitting  fkies,  like  flying  pursuivant, 

Againft   foul   fiends  to  aid   us    militant! 

They  for  us  fight,  they  watch  and  duly  ward. 

And   their  bright  squadrons  round  about   us  plant ; 

And  all  for  love  and  nothing  for  reward  ; 

Oh,  why  fhould  heavenly  God  to  men  have  such  regard  ? 

Edmund  Spenser. 


34 


Loi 


LARViE. 


'Y  little  maiden  of  four  years  old 
(No  myth,  but  a  genuine  child  is  fhe, 
With  her  brOnze-brown  eyes,  and   her  curls  of  gold) 
Came,  quite  in  disguft,  one  day,  to  me. 

Rubbing  her  fhoulder  with  rosy  palm, — 

As  the  loathsome  touch  seemed  yet  to  thrill  her. 

She  cried,  —  "Oh,   mother,  I   found  on  my  arm 
A  horrible,  crawling  caterpillar  !  " 

And  with   mischievous  smile  fhe  could  scarcely  smother. 
Yet  a  glance,  in  its  daring,  half-awed  and   fhy, 

She  added,  — "  While  they  were  about  it,   mother, 
I  wifh  they'd  juft  finifhed  the  butterfly  !  " 

They  were  words  to  the  thought  of  the  soul  that  turns 
From  the  coarser  form  of  a  partial  growth. 

Reproaching  the  Infinite  Patience  that  yearns 
With  an  unknown  glory  to  crown  them  both. 

Ah,  look  thou  largely,  with  lenient  eyes, 

On  whatso  befide  thee  may  creep  and  cling. 

For  the  poflible  beauty  that  underlies 

The   pafling  phase  of  the  meaneft  thing  ! 


Love.  35 

What  if  God's  great  angels,  whose  waiting  love 

Beholdeth  our  pitiful  life   below, 
From  the  holy  height  of  their  heaven  above. 

Couldn't  bear  with  the  worm  till   the  wings  fliould  grow  ? 

Atlantic  Monthly. 


THE   GATE   OF    HEAVEN. 

SHE  flood  outfide   the  gate  of  heaven,  and  saw  them 
entering  in, 
A  world-long  train  of  fhining  ones,  all  wafhed  in  blood 
from  fm. 

The  hero-martyr  in  that  blaze  uplifted  his  ftrong  eye, 
And  trod  firm  the  reconquered  soil  of  his  nativity  ! 

And  he  who  had   despised  his  life,  and    laid  it  down  in 

pain, 
Now  triumphed  in  its  worthinefs,  and   took  it  up  again. 

The  holy  one,  who  had  met  God  in  desert  cave  alone, 
Feared    not   to  ftand  with    brethren    around    the    Father's 
throne. 

They    who    had    done,    in    darkeft    night,    the   deeds    of 

light  and   flame, 
Circled  with  them  about  as  with  a  glowing  halo  came. 


36  Love. 

And    humble    souls,  who    held    themselves    too    dear  for 

earth  to  buy, 
Now  pafled  through  the  golden  gate,  to  live  eternally. 

And  when   into  the  glory  the  laft  of  all  did  go, 
"  Thank  God  !   there  is  a  heaven,''  fhe   cried,  *'  though 
mine  is  endlefs  woe." 

The  angel  of  the  golden  gate  said  :  "  Where,  then, 
doft   thou  dwell  ? 

And  who  art  thou  that  entered  not  ?  "  —  "  A  soul  es- 
caped  from  hell." 

"  Who    knows  to  blefs    with    prayer    like  thine,  in  hell 

can  never  be  ; 
God's    angel  could    not,  if  he    would,  bar  up    this   door 

from  thee." 

She  left   her    fin    outfide    the    gate,  fhe    meekly    entered 

there, 
Breathed  free  the    blefled  air  of  heaven,  and    knew  her 

native  air. 

Disciple's   Hymn   Book. 


37 


GOD    KNOWN    BY   LOVING   HIM. 

TIS  not  the  fkill  of  human  art 
Which  gives  me  power  my  God  to  know; 
The  sacred  leflons  of  the  heart 
Come  not  from  inftruments  below. 

Love  is  my  teacher.      He  can  tell 
The  wonders   that  he  learnt  above  ; 

No  other  mafter  knows  so  well  ;  — 
'T  is  Love  alone  can  tell  of  Love. 


O,  then   of  God  if  thou  wouldft  learn, 

His  wisdom,  goodnefs,  glory,  see  ; 
All  human  arts  and  knowledge  spurn, 

Let  love  alone  thy  teacher  be. 

Love  is  my  mafter.     When  it  breaks, 
The  morning  light,  with  rifing  ray. 

To  thee,  O  God  !   my  spirit  wakes. 
And  love  inftrutSls  it  all  the  day. 

And  when  the  gleams  of  day  retire. 
And  midnight  spreads  its  dark  control, 

Love's  secret  whispers  ftill  inspire 
Their  holy  leflons  in  the  soul. 

Madame  Guy  on. 


38 


LOVE. 

NO  outward   mark  we  have  to  know 
Who  thine,   O   Chrift,  may  be, 
Until  a  Chrirtian  love  doth  fhow 

Who  appertains  to  thee: 
For  knowledge  may  be  reach'd  unto, 

And  formal  juftice  gain'd, 
But  till  each  other  love  we   do, 
Both   faith  and  works  are  feign'd. 

Love  is  the  sum  of  those  commands. 

Which  Thou  with  thine  doft  leave  ; 
And   for  a  mark  on  them  it  flands. 

Which  never  can  deceive: 
For  when  our  knowledge  folly  turns, 

When  fhows  no  fhew  retain,- 
And  zeai  itself  to  nothing  burns. 

Then  love  Ihall  ftill  remain. 

George  Wither. 


39 


THE   SPILT   PEARLS. 

HIS  courtiers  of  the  Caliph  crave 
"  Oh,  say  how  this  may  be, 
That  of  thy  flaves,  this  Ethiop  flave 
Is  beft  beloved  by  thee  ? 

•  For  he  is  hideous  as  the  night : 

Yet  w^hen  has  ever  chose 
A  nightingale  for  its  delight 
A  huelefs,  scentlefs  rose  ?  " 


The  Caliph  then — "No  features  fair 
No  comely  mien  are  his  : 

Love  is  the  beauty  he  doth  wear. 
And  love  his   glory  is. 

"  Once  when  a  camel  of  my  train 
There  fell  in  narrow  ftreet, 
From  broken  cafket  rolled  amain 
Rich  pearls  before  my   feet. 

"  I  nodding  to  my  flaves,  that  I 
Would  freely  give  them  these. 
At  once  upon  the  spoil  they  fly. 
The  coftly  boon  to  seize. 


40  Love. 

*'One  only  at   my  fide  remained  — 
Befide  this  Ethiop,  none  : 
He,  movelefs  as  the  fteed  he  reined, 
Behind   me  fat  alone. 

"  '  What  will  thy  gain,  good  fellow,  be. 
Thus  lingering  at  my  fide  ?  '  — 
*  My  king,  that  I   fliall   faithfully 
Have  guarded  thee,'  he  cried. 

"  '  True  servant's  title  he  may  wear. 
He  only,  who  has  not. 
For  his  lord's  gifts,  how  rich  soe'er, 
His  lord  himself  forgot  !  '  " 

So  thou  alone  doft  walk  before 

Thy  God  with  perfedt  aim. 
From  Him  defiring  nothing  more 

Befide  himself  to  claim. 

For  if  thou  not  to  Him  aspire. 

But  to  his  gifts   alone. 
Not  love,  but  covetous  defire. 

Has  brought  thee  to  his  throne. 

While  such  thy  prayer,   it  climbs  above 

In  vain  —  the  golden  key 
Of  God's  rich  treasure-house  of  love. 
Thine  own  will  never  be. 

Trench. 
Tranjlated  from  Saad'i. 


4' 


FAITH    THAT    WORKETH    BY    LOVE. 

WHO   Iceepeth  not  God's  word,  yet  saith, 
I   know  the  Lord,  is  wrong  ; 
In   him   is  not  that   blefled   faith 

Through  which  the  truth  is  ftrong ; 
But  he  who  hears  and  keeps  the  word, 
Is  not  of  this  world,  but  of  God. 

The  faith   His  word  hath  caused  to  fhine 

Will  kindle  love  in  thee  ; 
More  wouldft  thou   know  of  things  divine, 

Deeper  thy  love   muft  be  ; 
True  faith  not  only  gives  thee  light, 
But  flreno-th  to  love  and  do  the  ri^ht. 


He  is  in  God,  and  God  in  him, 

Who  flill  abides   in   love  ; 
'Tis  love  that  makes  the  Cherubim 

Obey  and  praise  above  ; 
For  God  is  love,  the  lovelefs   heart 
Hath  in   His  life  and  joy  no  part. 

C.  F.  Gellert. 


1757- 


42 


ASiive  Duty. 


ACTIVE    DUTY. 


ARISE! 


ARISE  !  ye  lingering  saints,  arise  ! 
Remember  that  the  might  of  grace, 
When  guilty  flumbers  sealed  your  eyes, 

Awakened  you  to  run  the  race  j 
And  let  not  darknefs  round  you  fall, 
But  hearken  to  the  Saviour's  call. 

Arise  ! 

Arise  !  because  the  night  of  fm 
Muft  flee  before  the  light  of  day  ; 

God's  glorious  Gospel,  fhining  in, 

Muft  chase  the  midnight  gloom  away  : 

You  cannot  true  disciples  be 

If  you  ftill  walk  in  vanity. 

Arise ! 


Arise  !  although  the  flefti  be  weak, 
The  spirit  willing  is  and  true. 

And  servants  of  the  Mafter  seek 
To  follow  where  it  guided  to. 

Beloved  !   oh,  be  wise  indeed. 

And  let  the  spirit  ever  lead. 


A£iive  Duty. 

Arise  !  because   our   Serpent-foe, 

Unwearied,  ftrives  by  day   and  night  ; 

Remember,   time  is  (hort  below, 

And  wreftles  on  with  hellifh  might. 

Then  boldly  grasp  both  sword  and  fhield  — 

Who  flumbers  on  the  battle-field  ? 

Arise  ! 

Arise  !  before  that  hour  unknown  — 

The  hour  of  death  that  comes  ere  long. 

And  comes  not  to  the  weak  alone. 
But  to  the  mighty  and  the  ftrong. 

Beloved  oft  in  spirit  dwell 

Upon  the  hour  that  none  can  tell. 

Arise  ! 


43 


Arise  !   it  is  the  Mafter's  will : 

No  more  His  heavenly  voice  despise, 
Why  linger  with  the  dying  ftill  ? 

He  calls  —  Arouse  you,  and  arise! 
No  longer  flight  the  Saviour's  call, 
It  sounds  to  you,  to  me,  to  all. 

Arise  ! 
Ludwig  Goiter. 


44 


A£live  Duty. 


WORK   WHILE    IT    IS    DAY. 

UP,  Chrlftian,  up  I  —  and  fleep'ft  thou   ftill  ? 
Daylight  is  glorious  on  the  hill ! 
And  far  advanced,  the  sunny  glow- 
Laughs  in  the  sunny  vale  below  : 
The  morning's  fhadow,  long  and  late. 
Is  ftretching  o'er  the  dial's  plate. 

And  are  thine  eyes,  sad  waker,   say. 
Filled  with  the  tears  of  yefterday  ? 
Or  lowers  thy  dark  and  anxious  brow 
Beneath  to-morrow's  burthen  now  ? 
New  flrength  for  every  hour  is  given  — 
Daily  the  manna  fell  from   heaven  ! 

See,  link  by  link,  the  chain  is  made, 
And  pearl  by  pearl  the  coftly  braid  ; 
The  daily  thread  of  hopes  and  fears 
Weaves  up  the  woof  of  many  years ! 
And  well  thy  labour  fhall  have  sped 
If  well  thou  weav'ft  the  daily  thread. 


Up,  Chriftian,  up,  thy  cares  refign  ! 
The  pafl,  the  future,  are  not  thine  ! 


Aol'ive  Duty.  45 


Show   forth  to-day  the  Saviour's 

praise  ; 

Redeem   the  course  of  evil  days 

Life's  fhadow,  in   its  lengthening 

gloom, 

Falls  daily  nearer  to  the  tomb  ! 

Private    Hours. 

—&Qf^- 

SERVING   GOD. 

/^   NOT  to  fill  the  mouth 

of  fame 

V^   Alv  longing  soul  is   ftirre 

d; 

O,  give  me  a  diviner  name! 

Call   me  thy  servant,   Lord  ! 

Sweet  title   that  delighteth   me 



Rank  earneftly  implored  ; 

O,  what  can  reach  my  dignity 

? 

I  am  thy  servant,  Lord  ! 

No  longer  would   my  soul  be 

known 

As  self-suftained  and  free ; 

O,  not  mine  own  !   O,  not  mine  own  ! 

Lord,  I  belong  to  thee  ! 

In  each  aspiring  burft  of  prayer. 

Sweet  leave  my  soul  would 

afk 

Thine  every  burden,  Lord,  to 

bear, 

To  do  thine  every  tafk. 

46  Jdiive  Duty. 

Forever,  Lord,  thy  servant  choose, — 
Nought  of  thy  claim  abate ! 

The  glorious  name  I  w^ould  not  lose. 
Nor  change  the  sweet  eftate. 

In  life,  in  death,  on  earth,  in  heaven. 
No  other  name  for  me ! 

The  same  sweet  ftyle  and  title  given 
Through  all  eternity. 


r.  H.  Gill. 


ACTION. 

IT  is  not  they  who  idly  dwell 
In  cloifter  gray,  or  hermit  cell. 
In   prayer  and  vigil,  night  and  day, 
Wearing  all  their  prime  away. 
Lord  of  Heaven  !  that  serve  thee  well. 

Aftion  ftill  muft  wait  on  thought ; 

Life  's  a  voyage  rough  though  fhort ; 
We  muft  dare  the  sorrow-wave. 
Many  a  fm-ftorm  we  muft  brave. 

Ere  we  reach  our  deftined  port. 

Sitting  liftening  on  the  fhore 
To  the  ocean's  reftlefs  roar. 


jiSlive  Duty  47 

Never  launching  on  the  main, 
Can  the  merchant  hope  to  gain 
Wealth  to  swell  his  treasure-ftore  ? 

Vain  it  were  to  watch  befide 

The  pits  where  we  our  talents  hide  ; 

We  muft  face  the  noise  and  ftrife 

Of  the    market-place  of  life, 
That  our  truftinefs   be  tried. 

Where  our  Captain  bids  us  go, 
'T  is   not  ours  to  murmur,  "  No." 

He  that  gives  the   sword  and  fhield. 

Chooses  too  the  battle-field 
On  which  we  are  to  fight  the  foe. 

Though,  where'er  we  look  around, 
All  we  see  is  hoftile  ground. 

Where  our  upturn'd  eyes  above 

Recognize   His  banner,  Love, 
There  it  is  we  fhould  be  found. 


48 


A^ive  Duty. 


REPENTANCE. 


L 


ORD,  I   have  lain 


Barren  too  long,  and  fain 


I   would   redeem   the   time,   that  I   may   be 

Fruitful  to  thee  j 
Fruitful  in  knowledge,   faith,  obedience. 

Ere  I  go  hence  : 

'Fhat  when   I   come 
At  harveft  to  be  reaped,   and  brought  home, 

Thine  angels  may 
My  soul  in   thy  celeitial  garner  lay, 
Where  perfedt  'ov  and  blifs 

Eternal  is. 


If  to  entreat 
A  crop  of  pureft  wheat, 
A  blefling  too  transcendent  fhould  appear 

For  me  to  hear. 
Lord,  make  me  what  thou   wilt,   so  thou  wilt  take 
What  thou  doft  make, 
And  not  disdain 
To  house  me,  though  among  thy  coarseft  grain  ; 

So  I   may  be 
Laid  with   the  gleanings  gathered  by  thee. 
When  the  full  {heaves  are  spent, 
I   am  content. 

Francis  paries.      1 592- 1 644. 


Aol'tvc  Duty.  49 


NOTHING    BUT  LEAVES. 

NOTHING  but  leaves ;  the  spirit  grieves 
Over  a  u^afted  life  ; 
Sin  committed   while  conscience  flept. 
Promises  made  but  never  kept, 
Hatred,  battle,  and  ftrife  ; 
Nothing  but  leaves  ! 

Nothing  but  leaves  5  no  garnered  fheaves 

Of  life's  fair,  ripened  grain; 
Words,  idle  v^^ords,  for  earneft  deeds  ; 
We  sow  our  seeds  —  lo  !  tares  and  weeds; 

We  reap  with  toil  and  pain 
Nothing  but  leaves  ! 

Nothing  but  leaves  ;  memory  weaves 

No  veil  to   screen  the  paft  : 
As  we  retrace  our  weary  way. 
Counting  each  loft  and  miiTpent  day  — 

We  find,  sadly,  at  laft. 
Nothing  but  leaves  ! 

And  fhall  we  meet  the  Mafter  so, 
Bearing  our  withered  leaves  ? 
4 


50  ASlive  Duty. 

The  Saviour  looks   for  perfe6l   fruit, — 
We  ftand  before  him,  humbled,  mute  ; 
Waiting  the  words  he  breathes, — 
"  Nothing  but  leaves  ?  " 


QUESTIONS. 


WHY  doft  thou  talk  of  death,  laddie  ? 
Why  doft  thou  long  to  go  ? 
The  Mafter  that  hath  placed  thee  here 
Hath  work  for  thee  to   do. 

Why  doft  thou  talk  of  heaven,  laddie  1 
What  would'ft  thou   say  in  heaven. 

When  the  Mafter  afks,  "What  haft  thou   done 
With   the  talents  I   have  given  \ 

"  I  gave  thee  wealth  and  power. 

And  the  poor  around  thee  spread  : 
Where  are  the  ftieep  and  lambs  of  mine 
That  thou  haft  reared  and  fed  ? 


"  I  gave  thee  wit  and  eloquence 
Thy  brethren  to  persuade  : 


ASiivc  Duty.  51 

Where  are  the  thousands  by  thy  word 
More  wise  and   holy  made  ? 

"  I   placed  thee  in  a  land  of  light 

Where  the  Gospel  round  thee   fhone  : 
Where  is  the  heavenly-mindednefs 
I   hnd   in  all   mine  own  ? 

*'  And  laft  I  sent  thee  chaftisement, 
Ihat  thou   might'lt  be  my  son  : 
Where  is  the  trufting  faith  which  says, 
'Father!    Thy  will  be  done'?" 


— @©o— 


NO    HEART   ALONE. 

"  I  have  learned,"  says  the  melancholy  Peftalozzi,  "  that  in  this  wide  world 
no  one  heart  is  able  or  willing  to  help  another." 

OSAY   not  we  through  life   muft  flruggle, 
Muft   toil   and   mourn  alone  ; 
That  no  one  human  heart  can  answer 
The  beatings  of  our  own. 

The  flars  look  down   from  the  filent  heaven 
Into  the  quiet  ftream, 


52  ASiive  Duty. 

And  see  themselves  from  its  dewy  depths 
In   freftier  beauty  gleam. 

The  fky  with  its  pale  or  glowing  hues, 
Ever  painteth  the  wave  below  ; 

And  the  sea  sends  up  its  mift  to  form 
Bright  clouds  and  the  heavenly  bow. 

Thus  each  does  of  the  other  borrow 

A  beauty  not  its  own  ; 
And  tells   us  that  no  thing  in  Nature 

Is  for  itself  alone. 


Alone,  amid  life's  griefs  and   perils. 

The  ftouteft  soul  may  quail : 
Left  to  its  own  unaided  efforts. 

The  ftrongeft  arm   may  fail  ; 

And  though  all  ftrength  flill  comes  from  Heaven, 

All  light  from  God  above. 
Yet  we  may  sometimes  be  his  angels, 

The  Apoftles  of  his  love. 

Then  let  us  learn  to  help  each  other. 

Hoping  unto  the  end  : 
Who  sees  in  every  man  a  brother, 

Shall  find  in  each  a  friend. 


Aaive  Duty. 


53 


CHARITY. 

THE  pilgrim  and  ftranger,  who,  through  the  day, 
Holds  over  the  desert  his  tracklefs  way, 
Where  the  terrible  sands  no  fhade  have  known. 
No  sound  of  life  save  his  camel's  moan, 
Hears,  at  laft,  through  the  mercy  of  Allah  to  all, 
From  his  tent-door,  at  evening,  the   Bedouin's  call  : 
"  Whoever  thou  art,   whose  need  is  great. 
In   the  name  of  God,  the  Compaffionate 
And  Merciful  One,   for  thee  I  wait ! " 


For  gifts,  in   His  name,  of  food  and  reft. 
The   tents  of  Iflam  of  God  are  bleft. 
Thou,  who  haft  faith  in  the  Chrift  above. 
Shall  the  Koran  teach  thee  the  Law  of  Love  ? 
O  Chriftian  ! — open  thy  heart  and  door, — 
Cry,  eaft  and  weft,  to  the  wandering  poor,  — 
"  Whoever  thou  art,  whose  need  is  great. 
In  the  name  of  Chrift,  the  Compaffionate 
And  Merciful  One,  for  thee  I  wait !  " 

Mifs  E.  J.   TFhittier. 


54 


Aaive  Duty. 


MATTHEW    30:    34. 

COME,  blefled  of  my  heavenly  Father,   come  ! 
In  the  high  heavens  your  kingdom  is  prepared  ; 
Yours  is  the  sceptre   and  the  rich  reward  ; 
Hafte,   for  your  Saviour  calls  you  to  your  home  : 
For  I   was  hungry,  and  ye  brought  me  bread  ; 
I  thirfted,  and  your  cooling  draughts  were   mine  ; 
O'er  my  cold  limbs  the  needed  veft  ye  spread  j 
A  ftranger  was  1,  and  ye  took  me  in  ; 
I  pined  in  ficknefs,  and  ye  brought  relief  j 
In  the  deep  dungeon,  and  ye  soothed   my  grief: 
For  these,   my  brethren,  these,  the  lowly  poor. 
Ye  sent  not  cold  and  empty  from  your  door  ; 
But  ye  relieved  their  wants,  and  heard   their  plea  ; 
'T  was  done  for  my  sake,  and  't  was  done  to  me  ! 


"•**©^P©***" 


LENT. 


I 


S  this  a  Faft,  to  keep 
The  larder  lean 
And  clean 


Aaive  Duty. 


55 


From  fat  of  neats  and  fheep  ? 
Is  it  to  quit  the  difti 

Of  flcfli,  yet  ftill 

To  fill 
The  platter  high  with  fifh  ? 

Is  it  to  faft  an  hour, 

Or  ragg'd  to  go, 

Or  fhow 
A  downcaft   look  and  sour  ? 
No  :   'T  is  a  faft,  to  dole 

Thy  ftieaf  of  wheat 

And  meat 
Unto  the  hungry  soul. 


It  is  to  faft  from  ftrife. 

From   old   debate 

And   hate  ; 
To  circumcise  thy  lifej 

To  ftarve   thy  fm, 

Not   bin  : 
And  that's  to  keep  thy  Lent  1 

Robert  Her  rick. 


1648. 


^.6 


A^Jive  Duty. 


THE   TWINS 
"  Give  "  and  "  It-fhall-be-given-unto-you." 

GRAND  rough  old  Aiartin  Luther 
Bloomed  fables  —  flowers  on  furze, 
The  better  the  uncouther  : 
Do  roses  ftick  like  burrs  ? 

"  A  beggar  afked  an  alms 

One  day  at  an  abbey-door," 
Said  Luther  ;  *'  but,  seized  with  qualms, 
The  Abbot  replied,  '  We're  poor!' 

"  '  Poor,  who  had  plenty  once, 

'  When  gifts   fell  thick  as  rain  ; 
'  But  they  give   us  nought,  for  the  nonce, 
'  And  how  fhould  we  give  again  ?  ' 

"  Then  the  beggar,  '  See  your  fins  ! 

*  Of  old,  unlefs  I  err, 
'  Ye  had  brothers  for  inmates,  twins, 

'  Date  and  Dabitur. 


"  '  While  Date  was  in  good  case 
*  Dabitur  flourifhed  too  : 


Aaive  Duty. 

'  For  Dabitur's  lenten  face, 
'  No  wonder  if  Date  rue. 

"  *  Would  ye  retrieve  the  one  ? 

'  Try  and  make  plump  the  other  ! 
'  When  Date's   penance  is   done, 
'  Dabitur  helps  his   brother. 

"  '  Only,  beware  relapse  !  ' 

The   Abbot  hung  his  head. 
This  beggar  might  be,  perhaps, 
An  angel,"  Luther  said. 

Robert  Browning. 


57 


EPIPHANY. 

THAT  so  thy  blelTed  birth,  O   Chrift, 
Might  through  the  world  be  spread  about. 
Thy   ftar  appeared  in  the  Eaft, 
Whereby  the  Gentiles  found  thee  out  ; 
And  offering  thee  myrrh,  incense,  gold, 
Thy  three-fold  office  did   unfold. 

Sweet  Jesus,  let  that  flar  of  thine. 
Thy  grace,  which  guides  to   find  out  thee. 
Within   our   hearts  forever  fhine, 
That  thou  of  us   found  out  may'ft  be  : 
And  thou   fhalt  be  our  King,  therefore. 
Our  Prieft  and   Prophet  evermore. 


58  Aa'ive  Duty. 

Tears,  that  from  true  repentance  drop, 
Inftead   of  myrrh,  present  will  we  : 
For  incense  we  will  offer  up 
Our  prayers  and  praises  unto  thee ; 
And  bring  for  gold  each  pious  deed, 
Which  doth   from   saving  grace  proceed. 

And  as  those  wise  men  never  went 
To  visit  Herod  any  more  ; 
So,  finding  thee,  we  will  repent 
Our  courses  follow'd   heretofore: 
And  that  we  homeward   may  retire. 
The  way  by  thee  we  will  inquire. 

George  Wither. 


THE   CHAMBERED    NAUTILUS. 

THIS  is  the  fhip  of  pearl,  which,   poets  feign. 
Sails  the   unfhadowed  main  — 
The  venturous  barque  that  flings 
On  the  sweet  summer  wind  its  purpled  wings 
In  gulfs  enchanted,  where  the  syren  ilngs. 

And  coral  reefs  lie  bare. 
Where  the  cold  sea-maids  rise  to  sun  their  flream- 
ing  hair. 

Its  webs   of  living  gauze  no  more  unfurl  ; 
Wrecked  is  the  fliip  of  pearl  ! 
And  every  chambered  ceil. 


ASiive  Duty.  59 

Where   its  dim-dreaming  life   was   wont  to  dwell, 
As  the   frail  tenant  fhaped  his  growing  fhell, 

Before  thee  lies  revealed  — 
Its   irised  ceiling  rent,   its   sunlefs   crypt   unsealed. 

Year  after  year  beheld  the   filent  toil 

That   spread   his   luftrous   coil ; 

Still,  as  the  spiral  grew, 
He  left  the  paft  year's  dwelling  for  the  new. 
Stole  with  soft  ftep  its  fhining  archway  through. 

Built  up  its  idle  door. 
Stretched  in  his  laft-found    home,   and   knew  the  old 
no  more. 

Thanks  for  the  heavenly  mefTage  brought  by  thee, 

Child  of  the  wandering  sea, 

Caft  from  her  lap,  forlorn  ! 
From  thy  dead  lips  a  clearer  note  is  born 
Than  ever  Triton  blew  from  wreathed  horn  ! 

While  on   mine  ear  it  rings. 
Through  the  deep   caves  of  thought  I   hear  a  voice 
that  fings  : 


Build   thee  more  flately  manfions,   O   my  soul, 

As  the  swift  seasons  roll ! 

Leave  thy  low-vaulted   paft  ! 
Let  each   new  temple,    nobler  than  the  laft, 
Shut  thee   from   heaven   with   a  dome   more   vaft. 

Till   thou  at  length   art   free, 
Leaving  thine  out-grown   fhell   by  life's   unrefting  sea! 

Dr.  O.  W.  Holmes. 


6o  ASiive  Duty. 


FROM  "THE   SEXTON'S    DAUGHTER." 

STILL  hope  !   ftill  aft  !      Be  sure  that  life, 
The  source  and  ftrength  of  every  good, 
Waftes  down  in   feeling's  empty   ftrife. 
And  dies  in  dreaming's  fickly  mood. 

To  toil,  in  tafks   however  mean, 

For  all  we  know  of  right  and  true,  — 

In  this  alone  our  worth  is  seen  ; 
'T  is  this  we  were  ordained  to  do. 

So  flialt  thou  find  in  work  and  thought 
The  peace  that  sorrow  cannot  give  ; 

Though  griefs  worft  pangs  to  thee  be  taught, 
By  thee  let  others  noblier  live. 

Oh   wail  not  in  the  darksome  foreft. 
Where  thou   muft  needs  be  left  alone  ! 

But,  e'en  when  memory  is  soreft. 
Seek  out  a  path,  and  journey  on. 

Thou   wilt  have  angels  near  above. 

By  whom   invifible   aid   is  given  ; 
They  journey  ftill  on  tafks  of  love. 

And  never  reft,  except  in   heaven. 

St  67- ling. 


AStive  Duty.  6 1 


THE    CLOUD   VOICE. 


M 


ORTAL  !  on  our  azure  pathway 
Speed  we  where  our  errand  lies  ; 


Each  our  urn  of  treasures  bearing, 
Freihening  earth  with   glad  supplies. 

By  no  will  of  ours  we  rose  here, 
By  no  choice  of  ours  we  live  j 

Powers,  far,  far  above  our  scanning, 
Laws  inevitable   give. 


Our  snowy  forms,  in  mid-day  air. 

Our  sunset  tints  of  fire, 
Our  lightning-flafh,  our  thunder-roar, 

Obey  a  mandate  higher. 

Our  fky-course  run,   our  miffion  wrought, 
Wafted  forms  we  fink  to  earth. 

Till  that  same  Great  Power  recall   us 
To  another  new  air-birth. 

Thus  far  onward   we  together ;  — 
For  the  forms  of  good  and  ill. 


62  j£five    Duty. 

The  events  which  clufter  round  thee, 
These  exift  not  through  thy  will. 

Yet  within  thy  human  bosom 
Dwells  a  force   creative  too ; 

Outward  circumftance  it  fafhions, 
All  invefts  with   its  life-hue. 

And  thy  glory  lies  in   ufing, 

Right  and  true,  this  wondrous  ftrength  ; 
Soaring  where  thy  chains  permit  thee, 

Not   murmuring  for   more  length. 

In  the  pride  of  human  reason 

Thou   haft  spurned  a  finite  power, 

And  sought  the  Eternal  Cause  of  all 
To  grasp  in  life's  fhort  hour. 

Not  to   scan  thy   Father's  counsels, 
But  perform  them,  is  thv  tafk  ; 

Duty  finifhed  —  then  the  why 
Of  thy   being  thou  'It  not  afk. 

Puzzle  thee  the  paths  of  duty, 
As  their   varied  course  they  run  ? 

Oh   linger  not  in    wilds  of  doubt  ! 
Strike  unto  the  nearelt  one. 

'T  will  lead  thee  to  some  fairer  height, 
Radiant  with  celeftial  glow. 


J^ive  Duty. 


^3 


Where  the  prospecfl  all  before  thee 
Brighter,  clearer,  ilill   fhall  grow. 

Then  whilft  thou   art  upward  haftening, 
New  vifions  from  new   heights  to  gain, 

No   more   fhall   how  onivard  vex   thee  ;  — 
Duty  done,  life's   path   is   plain. 

Perennial  Flowers. 


64 

1 
Saifits. 

SAINTS. 

-@©^- 

INFLUENCE. 

TOY  of  my  life,  while  left  me  here  ! 

J           And  flill  my  love  ! 

How  in  thy  absence  thou  doft  fteere 

Me  from  above  ! 

A  life  well  lead 

This  truth   commends, 

With  quick  or  dead 

]t  never  ends. 

Stars  are  of  mighty  use  :    the  night 

Is  dark  and  long ; 

The  rode  foul ;  and  where  one  goes  right, 

Six  may  go  wrong. 

One  twinkling  ray. 

Shot  o're  some  cloud. 

May  clear  much  way, 

And  guide  a  crowd. 

God's  saints  are  fhining  lights  :   who  ftays 

Here  long,  muil  pafTe 

Sell /its.  65 

O're  dark  hills,  swift  ftreams,  and  fteep  ways 
As  smooth   as  glafle  ; 
But  these  all  night, 
Like  candles,  ihed 
Their  beams,  and  light 
Us  into  bed. 

They  are  indeed  our  pillar-fires. 

Seen  as  we  go  ; 
They  are  that  citie's  fhining  spires 

We  travell  to. 

A  sword-like  gleame 

Kept  man  from  fin 

Firft  out ;  this  beame 

Will  guide  him  in. 

Henry  Faugh  an.      1 62 1— 1695. 

MY   LOVE. 

NOT  as  all  other  women  are 
Is   fhe  that  to  my  soul   is  dear  j 
Her  glorious  fancies  come  from  far, 
Beneath  the  filver  evening  flar, 
And  yet  her  heart  is  ever  near. 

Great   feelings  hath  fhe  of  her  own, 
Which  lefi^er  souls  may  never  know  j 
5 


66  Saints. 

God  giveth  them  to  her  alone, 
And  sweet  they  are  as  any  tone 
Wherewith  the  wind  may  choose  to  blow. 

Yet   in  herself  flie  dwelleth  not, 
Although  no  home  were  half  so  fair ; 
No  fimpleft  duty  is  forgot. 
Life  hath  no  dim  and  lowly  spot 
That  doth  not  in  her  sunfhine  Ihare. 

She  doeth  little  kindnefTes 

Which   moft  leave  undone  or  despise; 

For  naught  that  sets  one  heart  at  ease, 

And  giveth  happiness  or  peace, 

Is  low-efteemdd  in  her  eyes. 

She  hath  no  scorn  of  common  things, 
And,  though  fhe  seem  of  other  birth, 
Round   us  her  heart  entwines  and  clings. 
And  patiently  fhe  folds   her  wings 
To  tread  the  humble   paths  of  earth. 

Blefling  fhe  is  :   God   made  her  so. 
And  deeds  of  week-day  holinefs 
Fall  from    her  noiselefs  as  the  snow, 
Nor  hath  fhe  ever  chanced  to  know 
That  aught  were  eafier  than  to  blefs. 

She  is   moft  fair,  and  thereunto 
Her  life  doth  rightly  harmonize  ; 


Saints.  67 

Feeling  or  thought  that  was  not  true 
Ne'er  made  lefs  beautiful  the  blue 
Unclouded  heaven  of  her  eyes. 

She  is  a  woman  :  one  in  whom 
The  spring-time  of  her  childifh  years 
Hath  never  loft  its  frefh  perfume, 
Though  knowing  well  that  life  hath  room 
For  many  blights  and  many  tears. 

I  love  her  with  a  love  as  ftill 
As  a  broad  river's   peaceful  might, 
Which,  by  high  tower  and  lowly  mill. 
Goes   wandering  at  its  own  will, 
And  yet  doth  ever  flow  aright. 

And,  on  its  full,  deep  breaft  serene. 

Like  quiet  ifles   my  duties   lie  ; 

It  flows  around  them  and  between, 

And   makes  them  frefh,  and  fair,  and  green, 

Sweet  homes  wherein  to  live  and  die. 

y.   R.    Lowell. 


68 


Saints. 


THE   UPRIGHT  SOUL. 

LATE  to  our  town  there  came  a  maid, 
A  noble  woman,  true  and  pure. 
Who  in  the   little  while  Ihe  flayed, 
Wrought  works   that  fhall  endure. 

It  was   not  anything  fhe  said  — 

It  was  not  anything  flie  did  : 
It  was  the  movement  of  her  head  — 

The  lifting  of  her  lid. 

Her  little  motions  when  fhe  spoke. 
The  presence  of  an  upright  soul, 

The  living  light  that  from  her  broke, 
It  was  the  perfe61:  whole  : 

We  saw  it  in  her  floating  hair. 
We  saw  it  in  her  laughing  eye ; 

For  every  look  and  feature  there, 
Wrought  works  that  cannot  die. 


For  fhe  to  many  spirits  gave 

A  reverence  for  the  true,  the  pure. 

The  perfect,  — '  that  has  power  to  save, 
And  make  the  doubtino-  sure. 


Saints.  69 

She   pafled  —  fhe  went  to  other  lands, 
She  knew   not  of  the  vvorlc  ihe  did  ; 

The  wondrous  product  of  her  hands, 
From  her  is  ever  hid. 

Forever,  did  I  say  ?    O,  no  ! 

The  time  mu{t  come  when  fhe  will  look 
Upon  her  pilgrimage  below. 

And  find  it  in  God's  book, 

That,  as  fhe  trod  her  path  aright. 

Power  from  her  very  garments  flole  ; 

For  such  is  the  myflerious  might 
God  grants  the  upright  soul. 

A   deed,  a  word,  our  carelefs  refl, 

A  fimple  thought,  a  common  feeling. 

If  He  be  present  in  the  breafl. 
Has  from  Him  powers  of  healing. 

Go,  maiden,  with  thy  golden  trefTes, 
Thine  azure  eye  and  changing  cheek, 

Go,  and  forget  the  one  who  bleffes 
Thy  presence  through  the  week. 

Forget  him  :   he  will  not  forget, 

But  flrive  to  live  and  teflify 
Thy  goodnefs,  when  Earth's  sun  has  set. 

And  Time  itself  rolled  by. 

y.  H.  Perkins. 


70 


Saints. 


THE    AGED    PATRIARCH. 

OF  life's  paft  woes  the  fading  trace, 
Hath  given  that  aged  patriarch's  face 
Expreflion  holy,  deep,  refigned  — 
The  calm  sublimity  of  mind. 
Years  o'er  his  snowy  head  have  paft, 
And  left  him  of  his  race  the  laft. 
Alone  on  earth,  but  yet  his  mien 
Is   bright  with  majefly  serene  ; 
And  those  high  hopes,  whose  guiding  ftar 
Shines  from  eternal  worlds  afar. 
Have  with  that  light  illumined  his  eye 
Whose  fount  is  immortality  ; 
And  o'er  his   features  poured  a  ray 
Of  glory,  not  to  pafs  away. 
He  seems  a  being  who  hath  known 
Communion  with- his  God  alone; 
On  earth  by   nought  but  pity's  tie. 
Detained  a  moment  from  on  high. 
One  to  sublimer  worlds  allied, 
One  from  all  paflions  purified. 
Even  now  half  mingled  with  the  fky. 
And  all  prepared,  oh,  not  to  die. 
But,  like  the  prophet,  to  aspire 
To  heaven's  triumphal  car  of  fire  ! 

Mrs.  Hemans. 


I 


Saints.  7 1 


AN    EPITAPH. 

THE  modeft  front  of  this  small  floor 
Believe  me,  reader,  can  say   more 
Than  many  a  braver  marble  can, — 
*'  Here  lies  a  truly  honeft  man  !  " 
One  whose  conscience  was  a  thing 
That  troubled  neither  church  nor  king  ; 
One  of  those  i^w  that  in  this  town 
Honour  all  preachers,  hear  their  own. 
Sermons  he  heard,  yet  not  so  many 
As  left  no  time  to  pra6lice  any  ; 
He  heard  them  reverently,  and  then 
His  practice  preach'd  them  o'er  again  ; 
His  parlour-sermons  rather  were 
Those  to  the  eye,  than  to  the  ear  ; 
His  prayers  took  their  price  and   ftrength 
Not  from  the  loudnefs  nor  the  length  ; 
He  was  a  proteftant  at  home, 
Not  only  in  despite  of  Rome  ; 
He  loved  his  father,  yet  his  zeal 
Tore  not  ofF  his  mother's  veil  j 
To  th'  church  he  did   allow  her  drefs. 
True  beauty  to  true  holinefs  ; 
Peace,  which  he  loved  in  life,  did  lend 
Her  hand  to  bring  him   to  his  end  ; 


72  Saints. 

When  age  and  death  call'd  for  the  score, 

No  surfeits  were  to  reckon  for  ; 

Death  tore  not,  therefore,  but,  sans  ftrife, 

Gently   untwined   his  thread  of  life. 

What  remains,  then,  but  that  thou 

Write  these  lines,  reader,  on  thy  brow, 

And,  by  his  fair  example's  light. 

Burn  in  thy  imijation  bright  ? 

So,  while  these  lines  can  but  bequeath 

A  life,  perhaps,  unto  his  death. 

His  better  epitaph  fhall  be  — 

His  life  ftill  kept   alive  in  thee. 

Richard  Crajhaw.      1637-1650. 


THE   TOUCHSTONE. 

A  MAN  there  came,   whence  none  could  tell. 
Bearing  a  touchftone  in  his  hand  ; 
And  tefted  all  things  in  the  land 
By  its  unerring  spell. 

Quick  birth  of  transmutation  smote 

The  fair  to  foul,  the  foul  to  fair  j 
Purple  nor  ermine  did  he  spare, 

Nor  scorn  the  duffcy  coat. 


Saints. 


73 


Of  heirloom  jewels,   prized   so   much, 

Were  many  changed  to  chips  and  clods, 
And  even  ftatues  of  the  gods 

Crumbled  beneath  its  touch. 

Then  angrily  the  people  cried, — 

"The  lofs  outweighs  the  profit  far; 
Our  goods  suffice  us  as  they  are  j 
We  will  not  have  them  tried." 

And  fmce  they  could  not  so  avail 

To  check  this  unrelenting  gueft, 

They  seized  him,  saying  —  "Let  him  teft 

How  real  is  our  jail !  " 

But,  though  they  flew  him  with  the  sword. 
And  in  a  fire  his  Touchftone  burn'd, 
Its  doings  could  not  be  o'erturn'd, 

Its  undoings  reftored. 


And  when,  to  flop  all  future  harm. 

They  ftrew'd  its  afhes  on  the  breeze  ; 
They  little  guefiT'd  each  grain  of  these 

Convey'd  the  perfect  charm. 

Willi  am  AUingham. 


74 


Content?nent. 


CONTENTMENT. 

GRATITUDE  AND    GRACE. 

ALAS  these  vifits  rare  and  rude 
Unto  Thy   holy  place  ! 
Our  weak,  wild  burfts  of  gratitude, 
Thy  calm,  clear  deeps  of  grace. 

Oh,  never  fhall  Thy  mercy  make 
Our  souls  to  reft  in  Thine  ? 

Nor  mortal  gratitude  partake 
The  flow  of  ffrace  divine  ? 


When  fhall  our  grateful  raptures  rise 

Fafl  as  Thy  grace  descends, 
And  link  to  endlefs  harmonies 

The  love  that  never  ends  ? 

T.  H.  GUI. 


Contentment. 


IS 


CONTENT. 

PEACE,  muttering  thoughts  !   and  do  not  grudge 
to  keep 
Within  the  walls  of  your  own  breaft. 
Who  cannot  on  his  own   bed   sweetly  fleep 
Can  on  another's  hardly  reft. 

Gad  not  abroad  at  every  queft  and  call 

Of  an   untrained  hope  or  paflion. 
To  court  each   place  or  fortune  that  doth  fall, 

Is  wantonnefs  in  contemplation. 

Mark,   how  the  fire  in  flints  doth  quiet  lie 

Content  and  warm  t'  itself  alone  ; 
But  when  it  would  appear  to  others'  eye. 

Without  a  knock  it  never  ftione. 

Give  me  the  pliant  mind,  whose  gentle  measure 

Complies  and  suits  with  all  eftates  ; 
Which    can    let    loose    to    a    crown,    and    yet    with 
pleasure 

Take  up  within  a  cloifter's  gates. 


This  soul  doth  span  the  world,  and  hang  content 
From   either  pole  unto  the  centre  : 


76 


Contentment, 


Where,  in  each  room  of  the   well-furnifhed  tent, 
He  lies  warm  and  without  adventure. 

Then  cease  discourfing,  soul  ;  till  thine  own  ground. 

Do  not  thyself  or  friends  importune. 
He  that,  by  seeking,  hath   himself  once  found. 

Hath  ever  found  a  happy  fortune. 

George  Herbert.      1593—1635. 

— ©©©— 
POVERTY. 


SOME  think  there  is  no  earthly  flate 
To  be  abhorred  more. 
Or  more  deserving  fear  or  hate, 

Than  to  be  mean  and  poor  : 
Yet  such  a  portion  I  have  got, 

That  I  am  needy  made  ; 

Yea,  this  is  fallen  to  my  lot. 

And  yet   I  am  not  sad. 

For  earth  and  all  that  therein  is, 

The   Lord's  pofleflions  be  ; 
Both  He  is  mine  and  I  am   His, 

Who  hath  enough  for  me  : 
The  rich  their  own  providers  are. 

Yet  sometimes  they  have  need  ; 
But  God  hath  of  the  poor  a  care. 

And  them  doth  always  feed. 


Contentment. 


11 


Though  poverty  seem  grievous   may, 

And  much  affliiteth  some, 
It  is  the  beft  and  safeft  way 

Unto  the  world   to  come  ; 
For  poverty  in  her  extreme. 

Nor  tempts  nor  so  perverts, 
As  great  abundance  tempteth  them 

Who  thereon  set  their  hearts. 

Therefore,  that  every  man  might  grow 

With  his  eftate   content  ; 
Thy  Son,  O   God  !   this  way  did  go. 

When  through  this  world  He  went  j 
He  wealth  and  honor  prized  not, 

Though  we  now  prize  it  high. 
And  Satan,  therefore,  nothing  got 

By  tempting  Him  thereby. 

Lord  !  though   I  do  sometimes  complain 

That  outward  means  are  scant. 
And  would  afTume  that  luggage  fain, 

Which  I  but  think  I  want  j 
Yet  when  I   mind  how  poor  a  life 

My  Saviour  lived  on  earth. 
Wealth  I  condemn,  and  all  my  grief 

Is  chansed  into  mirth. 


Let  ftill  my  heart  be  pleased  so, 

Whate'er  betide  me  fhall  ; 
Yea,  make  me,   though  I  poorer  grow. 

Contented  therewithal  : 


78  Contentment. 


And  let  me  not  be  one  of  them 

Who,   in  profeflion  poor, 
Seem  wealth  and  pleasure  to  contemn, 

That  they  may  cheat  the  more. 

The  works   my  calling  doth  propose, 

Let  me  not  idly  fhun  ; 
For  he  whom  idlenefs  undoes. 

Is  more  than  twice  undone  : 
If  my  eftate  enlarge  I   may. 

Enlarge  my  love  to  Thee  ; 
And  though  I   more  and  more  decay. 

Yet  let  me  thankful  be. 

For  be  we  poor  or  be  we  rich. 

If  well  employ'd  we  are. 
It  neither  helps  nor  hinders  much, 

Things  needful  to  prepare  ; 
Since  God  disposeth  riches  now, 

As  manna  heretofore. 
The  feebleft  gath'rer  got  enow, 

The  ftrongeft  got  no  more. 

Nor  poverty  nor  wealth  is  that 

Whereby  we  may  acquire 
That   bleffed  and  moft  happy  ftate, 

Whereto  we  fhould  aspire  ; 
But  if  Thy  Spirit  make  me  wise. 

And  ftrive  to  do  my  beft. 
There  may  be  in  the  worft  of  these 

A   means  of  being  blefT'd. 


Contentment. 


79 


The  rich  in  love  obtain   from  Thee 

Thy  special  gifts  of  grace  ; 
The  poor  in  spirit  those  men  be 

Who  (hall  behold  Thy  face  : 
Lord  !   grant  I   may  be  one  of  these, 

Thus   poor,  or  else  thus  rich  ; 
E'en  -whether  of  the  two  Thou  please, 

I  care  not  greatly  which. 

George  Wither. 


GIVE    US    OUR    DAILY    BREAD. 

DAY  by  day  the  manna  fell ; 
O,  to  learn  this  leflbn  well  ! 
Still  by  conftant  mercy  fed, 

Give  us,  Lord,  our  daily  bread. 

'  Day  by  day  "  the  promise  reads  ; 
'     Daily  ftrength  for  daily  needs  : 
Caft  foreboding  fears  away  ; 
Take   the  manna  of  to-day  ! 

Lord,  our  times    are  in  thy  hand  ; 

All  our  sanguine  hopes  have  planned. 
To  thy  wisdom  we  refign. 

And  would  mould  our  wills  to  thine. 


Thou  our  daily  taik  fhalt  give  ; 
Day  by  day  to  thee  we  live  ; 


8o  Contentment. 


So  fhall  added  years  fulfil 

Not  our  own,  our  Father's  will. 

O,  to  live  exempt  from  care, 

By  the  energy  of  prayer  j 
Strong  in  faith,  with  mind  subdued, 

Glowing  yet  with  gratitude  ! 

Conder. 


RECONCILED. 

O  YEARS  gone  down  into  the  paft ; 
What  pleasant  memories  come  to  me, 
Of  your  untroubled  days  of  peace. 
And  hours  of  almoft  ecftacy  ! 

Yet  would  I  have  no  moon  ftand  ftill, 
Where  life's  moft  pleasant  valleys  lie  ; 

Nor  wheel  the  planet  of  the  day 

Back  on  his  pathway  through  the  fky. 

For  though,  when  youthful  pleasures  died. 
My  youth  itself  went   with   them,,  too  ; 

To-day,  aye  !   even    this  very  hour, 
Is   the  beft  hour  I  ever  knew. 

Not  that  my  Father  gives  to   me 

More  blefliiigs  than  in  days  gone  by. 


Contentment.  8 1 


Dropping   in  my  uplifted   hands 

All  things  for  which  I  blindly  cry  ; 

But  that  His  plans  and  purposes 

Have  grfown  to  me  lefs   ftrang-e  and  dim ; 
And  where  I   cannot  underftand, 

I   truft  the  iiTues   unto   Him. 

And  spite  of  many  broken   dreams, 
This  have  I   truly  learned  to  say  — 

Prayers  which  I  thought  unanswered  once 
Were  answered  in  God's  own  beft  way. 

And  though  some  hopes   I  cherifhed  once, 
Perifhed   untimely  in  their  birth. 

Yet  have  I   been  beloved  and  bleft 
Beyond  the  measure  of  my  worth. 

And  sometimes  in   my  hours  of  grief 
For  moments,  I   have  come  to   ftand 

Where,  in  the  sorrows  on  me  laid, 

I   felt  the  chaftening  of  God's  hand  ;  — 

Then  learned  I  that  the  weakeft  ones 
Are  kept  secureft  from  life's  harms  ; 

And  that  the  tender  lambs  alone 
Are  carried  in  the  fhepherd's  arms. 

And,  fitting  by  the  wayfide   blind, 
He  is  the  neareft  to  the  light, 
6 


Contentment. 


Who  crieth  out  moft  earneftly, 

"Lord,  that  I   might  receive  my  fight!" 

O   feet,  grown  weary  as  ye  walk. 

When  down  life's  hill  my  pathway  lies. 

What  care  I,  while  my  soul  can  mount 
As  the  young  eagle  mounts  the  fkies  ? 

O  eyes,  with  weeping  faded  out, 
What  matters   it  how  dim  ye  be  ? 

My  inner  vifion  sweeps  untired 
The  reaches  of  eternity  ! 

O   death,   moft  dreaded  power  of  all. 

When  the  laft  moment  comes,  and  thou 

Darkeneft  the  windows  of  my  soul. 

Through   which  I  look  on  Nature  now  ; 

Yea,   when   mortality    diflblves. 

Shall   I   not  meet  thine  hour  unawed  ? 

My  house  eternal  in  the  heavens, 
Is  lighted  by  the  smile  of  God  ! 

Phoebe  Carey. 


Contentment.  83 


CONTENT  AND    RICH. 

I  DWELL  in  grace's  courts, 
Enriched  with   virtue's  rights ; 
Faith  guides  my  wit,  love  leads  my  will, 
Hope  all  my  mind  delights. 

In  lowly  vales  I   mount 

To  pleasure's  higheft  pitch. 
My  fimple  drefs   sure  honor  brings, 

My  poor  eftate  is  rich. 

My  conscience  is  my  crown, 

Contented  thoughts  my  reft. 
My  heart  is  happy  in  itself, 

My  blifs  is  in  my  breaft. 

Enough,  I  reckon  wealth  j 

A   mean,  the  sureft  lot. 
That  lies  too  high   for  base  contempt, 

Too  low  for  envy's  fhot. 

My  wifhes  are  but  icw.^ 

All  easy  to  fulfil ; 
I  make  the  limits  of  my  power 

The  bounds  unto  my  will. 


§4  Contentment. 


I  have  no  hopes  but  one, 

Which  is  of  heavenly  reign  : 
EfFecSls  attained,  or  not  defired, 

All  lower  hopes  refrain. 

I  feel  no  care  of  coin. 

Well-doing  is  my  wealth  : 
My  mind  to  me  an  empire  is. 

While  grace  affordeth  health. 

I  clip  high-climbing  thoughts. 
The  wings  of  swelling  pride : 

Their  fate  is  worft,  that  from  the  height 
Of  greater  honor  Aide. 

Silk  sails  of  largeft  fize 

The  ftorm  doth  sooneft  tear  : 

I  bear  so  low  and   small  a  sail 
As  freeth  me  from  fear. 

I  wreftle  not  with  rage 

While  fury's  flame  doth  burn  ; 

It  is  in  vain  to  flop  the  ftream 
Until  the  tide  doth  turn. 

But  when  the  flame  is  out, 

And  ebbing  wrath  doth  end, 
I  turn  a  late-enraged  foe 

Into  a  quiet  friend  -, 


Contentment. 

85 

And,  taught  with  often  proof, 

1 

A  tempered  calm  I  find 

To  be  moft  solace  to  itself, 

Befl  cure  for  angry  mind. 

Spare  diet  is  my  fare, 

My  clothes  more  fit  than  fine  j 

I   know  I   feed  and  clothe  a  foe 

That,  pampered,  would    repine. 

I  envy  not  their  hap 

Whom  favor  doth  advance  : 

I  take  no  pleasure  in  their  pain 

That  have  lefs  happy  chance. 

To  rise  by  others'   fall 

I  deem  a  lofing  gain  : 

&    to 

All  ftates  with  others'  ruins  built 

To  ruins  run  amain. 

No  change  of  fortune's  calms 

Can  caft  my  comforts  down  : 

When  fortune  smiles,  I  smile  to   think 

How  quickly  fhe  will   frown  j 

And  when,  in  froward  mood. 

She  proved  an  angry  foe, 

Small  gain  I  found  to  let  her  come. 

Lefs  lofs  to  let  her  go. 

Robert  Southwell.      1562- 

.1594. 

86  Contentment. 


FOR    A    SERVANT. 

DISCOURAGE  not  thyself,  my   soul, 
Nor  murmur,  though  compell'd  we  be 
To  live  subjedled  to  control. 
When  many  others  may  be  free  ; 
For  though  the  pride  of  some  disdains 
Our  means  and  much  despised  lot, 
We  fhall  not  lose  our  honeft  pains, 
Nor  fhall  our  sufFrance  be  forgot. 

To  be  a  servant  is  not  base. 

If  basenefs  be  not  in  the  mind, 

For  servants  make  but  good  the   place. 

Whereto  their  Maker  them  aflign'd  : 

The  greateft  princes  do  no  more. 

And  if  fmcerely  I  obey. 

Though  I  am  now  despised  and  poor, 

I  fhall  become  as  great  as  they. 

The  Lord  of  heav'n  and  earth  was  pleased 

A  servant's  form  to  undertake  ; 

By  His  endurance  I  am  eased. 

And  serve  with  gladnefs  for   His  sake  : 

Though  check'd  unjuftly  I  fhould  be. 

With  filence  I  reproofs  will  bear. 


Content?nent. 


87 


f'or   much    more   injured   was  He 
Whose  deeds   moil  worthy  praises  were. 

He  was  reviled,  yet  naught  replied, 

And  I   will  imitate  'the   same  ; 

For  though  some  faults  may  be  denied. 

In   part  I   always  faulty  am  : 

Content  with   meek  and  humble  heart, 

I  will  abide  in   my  degree. 

And  a6l  an  humble  servant's  part. 

Till  God  fhall  call  me  to  be  free. 

George   Wither. 


SCORN    NOT   THE    LEAST. 

WHEN    words    are    weak    and     foes     encount'nng 
ftrong, 
Where  mightier  do  afTault  than  do  defend. 
The  feebler  part  puts  up  enforced  wrong. 
And  filent  sees  that  speech  could  not  amend. 
Yet  higher  powers  moft  think  though   they  repine,  — 
When  sun  is  set,  the  little  ftars  will  fhine. 


While  pike  doth  range,  the  filly  tench  doth  fly, 
And   crouch  in  privy  creeks  with   smaller  fiih  ; 
Yet  pikes  are  caught  when  little  fifh  go  by  ; 
These   fleet  afloat  while  those  do   fill   the  difh. 


Contentment. 


There  is  a  time  even   for  the  worms  to  creep, 
And  suck  the  dew  while  all   their  foes  do  fleep. 

The  merlin  cannot  ever  soar  on   high, 

Nor  greedy  greyhound   ftill  pursue  the  chase  ; 

The  tender  lark  will  find  a  time  to  fly. 

And   fearful  hare  to   run  a  quiet  race. 

He  that  high-growth  on  cedars  did  beftow. 

Gave  also  lowly  mufhrooms  leave  to  grow. 

In  Haman's  pomp  poor  Mardocheus  wept, 

Yet  God  did  turn  his  fate  upon  his  foe  ; 

The  Lazar  pined  while  Dives'   feaft  was  kept. 

Yet  he  to  heaven,  to  hell  did  Dives  go. 

We  trample  grafs,  and  prize  the  flowers  of  May, 

Yet  grafs  is  green  when  flowers  do  fade  away. 

Robert  Southwell. 


Contentment.  89 


RESIGNATION. 

SAY,  Reader  !     canft  thou  bear  and  not  complain, 
Griefs   filent  languor,  or  the  hour  of  pain  ; 
One  small  fick-room,  with  noiselefs  footftep  tread, 
And  raise  in  peaceful  hope   the  aching  head  ; 
Smile  at  the  joy  it  is  not  thine  to  fhare. 
And  make  another's  pleasure  soothe  thy  care  ? 
Canll  thou,  while  they  beguile  the  weary  hours 
With  Nature's  charm  of  sunfhine,  air,  and  flowers, 
Refigned,  ftill  quaff  thy  daily  draught,  nor  mourn 
O'er  days  long  paft,  that  never  can  return  ? 
Say,  canft  thou  look,  with  calm  and  tearlefs  eyes, 
On  thy  imprisoned  days,  and  nights  of  fighs  ? 
Nor  of  each  friend  who  calls,  implore  the  fkill. 
And  watch  the  glance   that  dooms  thee  well  or  ill  ? 
Hold  out  the   feverifh   hand,  nor  ftart  to  see 
A   face  that  changes  on  beholdino-  thee  ? 
Firm  in  thy  God,  and  in  thy  heavenly  truft, 
Canft  thou  remember  fearlefs  thou   art  duft  ? 
Look  to  the  future,  glad  and  undismayed, 
And,    smiling,   see  thy  life  recede   in   fhade  ? 
Then,   Reader,  go — the  world  to  thee  can  bring 
In  trials,  woes,  temptations,  not  one  fting. 


90 

Contentment. 

ALL'S  WELL. 

OWEET-voiced  Hope,  thy  fine  discourse 

o 

Foretold  not  half  life's  good  to  me  : 

Thy 

painter,  Fancy,  hath  not  force 

To  fhow  how  sweet  it  is  to  Be ! 

Thy  witching  dream 

And  pi6lured  scheme 

To 

match  the  hSt  ftill  want  the  power  ; 

Thy  promise  brave 

From  birth  to  grave 

Life 

's  boon  may  beggar  in  an  hour. 

Afk 

and  receive, —  'tis  sweetly   said; 

Yet  what  to  plead   for   know  I  not  ; 

For 

Wifh  is  worfted,   Hope  o'ersped. 

And  aye  to  thanks  returns  my  thought. 

If  I  would   pray. 

I  've  nought  to  say 

But 

this,  that  God  may  be  God  ftill ; 

For  Him  to  live 

Is  ftill  to  give, 

And 

sweeter  than  my  wifti   His  will. 

Oh 

wealth  of  life,   beyond  all  bound  ! 

Eternity  each  moment  given  ! 

Contentment. 


91 


What  plummet  may  the   Present  sound  ? 
Who  promises  a  future  heaven  ? 

Or  glad,  or  grieved, 

Oppreffed,  relieved, 
In  blackeft  night,  or  brightest  day, 

Still  pours  the  flood 

Of  golden  good, 
And  more  than  heart-full  fills  me  aye. 

My  wealth   is  common  ;     I  poflefs 

No  petty  province,  but  the  w^hole; 
What's    mine  alone  is  mine  fiir  lefs 

Than  treasure  fhared  by  every  soul. 

Talk  not  of  ftore, 

Millions  or  more,  — 
Of  values  which  the  purse   may  hold, — 

But  this  divine  1 

I  own  the  mine 
Whose  grains  outweigh  a  planet's  gold. 


I  have  a  ftake  in  every  ftar,. 

In  every  beam  that  fills  the  day  ; 
All  hearts  of  men  my  coffers  are. 
My  ores  arterial  tides   convey  j 

The  fields,   the  fkies, 

And  sweet  replies 
Of  thought  to  thought  are  my  gold  dufl, 

The  oaks,  the  brooks, 

And  speaking  looks 
Of  lovers'   faith   and   friendfhip's  truft. 


92  Contentment. 


Life's  youngeft  tides  joy-brimming  flow 
For  him  who  lives  above  all  years, 
Who  all-immortal  makes  the  Now, 

And  is  not  ta'en  in  Time's  arrears  : 

His  life's  a  hymn 

The   seraphim 
Might  hark  to  hear  or  help  to  fing, 

And  to  his  soul 

The  boundlefs   whole 
Its  bounty  all  doth   daily  bring. 

*'  All  mine  is  thine,"  the  fky-soul  saith : 

*'  The  wealth  I  am,  muft  thou   become  : 
Richer  and  richer,   breath  by  breath,  — 
Immortal  gain,   immortal  room!" 
And  fince  all  his 
Mine  also   is. 
Life's  gift  outruns  my  fancies  far. 
And  drowns  the  dream 
In  larger  ftream, 
As  morning  drinks  the  morning  flar. 

D.  A.    Wajfon. 


Tr«/?.  93 


TRUST. 

AT    SEA. 

THE   night  was  made  for  cooling  fhade, 
For  filence,  and  for  fleep  ; 
And   when  I   was  a  child,   I  laid 
My  hands  upon  my  breaft,  and  prayed, 

And  sank  to  flumbers  deep. 
Childlike,  as  then,  I  lie  to-night, 
And  watch  my  lonely   cabin-light. 

Each  movement  of  the  swaying  lamp 

Shows  how  the  vefTel  reels. 
And  o'er  her  deck  the  billows  tramp, 
And   all  her  timbers  ftrain   and  cramp 

With  every  fhock  £he  feels  ; 
It  ftarts  and  fhudders,  while  it  burns, 
And  in  its  hinged  socket  turns. 

Now  swinging  flow,  and  flanting  low, 
It  almoft  level  lies  : 


94  Trujl. 

And  yet  I  know,  while  to  and  fro 
I  watch  the  seeming  pendule  go 

With  reftlefs  fall  and  rise, 
The  fteady  fhaft  is  ftill   upright, 
Poifing  its  little  globe  of  light. 

0  hand  of  God  !      O  lamp  of  peace  ! 
O   promise  of  my  soul  ! 

Though   weak  and  tolled,  and  ill  at  ease 
Amid  the  roar  of  smiting  seas  — 
The  fliip's  convulfive  roll  — 

1  own,  with  love  and  tender  awe. 
Yon  perfe6l  type  of  faith  and  law. 

A  heavenly  truft  my  spirit  calms  — 

My  soul   is  filled  with  light  ; 
The  ocean   fmgs  his  solemn  psalms; 
The  wild   winds  chant  ;     I   crofs  my  palms  ; 

Happy,  as  if  to-night. 
Under  the  cottage  roof  again, 
I  heard  the  soothing  summer  rain. 

y.    T.   Trotvbridge. 


TrujL 


95 


THE   PEACE  OF   GOD. 

WE  allc  for  Peace,  O  Lord! 
Thy  children  afk  Thy  peace  ; 
Not  what  the  world  calls  reft, 

That  toil  and  care  fhould  cease, 
That  through  bright  sunny  hours 

Calm  Life  fhould  fleet  away, 
And  tranquil  night  fhould  fade 
In  smiling  day, — 
It  is  not  for  such   Peace  that  we  would  pray. 

We  afk  for  Peace,  O  Lord! 

Yet  not  to  ftand   secure. 
Girt  round  with  iron  Pride, 

Contented  to  endure  : 
Crufhing  the  gentle  ftrings. 

That  human  hearts  fhould  know. 
Untouched  by  others'  joys 
Or  others'  woe  ;  — 
Thou,  O  dear  Lord,  wilt  never  teach  us  so. 

We  aik  Thy  Peace,  O  Lord  ! 

Through  ftorm,   and  fear,  and  ftrife. 
To  light  and  guide  us  on. 

Through  a  long  ftruggling  life  : 


ft 


96  Truji. 

While  no  succefs  or  gain 

Shall  cheer  the  desperate  fight, 
Or  nerve,  what  the  world  calls, 
Our  wafted   might: 
Yet  prefling  through  the  darknefs  to  the  light. 

It  is  Thine  own,   O   Lord ! 

Who  toil  while  others  fleep. 
Who  sow  with  loving  care 

What  other  hands  fhall   reap  : 
They  lean  on  Thee,   entranced 

In  calm  and  perfedl  reft  : 
Give  us  that  Peace,   O  Lord  ! 
Divine  and  bleft. 
Thou  keepeft  for  those  hearts  who  love  Thee  beft. 

J.    A.   Proa  or. 


CHILDLIKE   SUBMISSION. 

WHAT  pleases   God,  O  pious  soul. 
Accept  with  joy ;  though  thunders  roll 
And  tempefts  lower  on  every  fide, 
Thou  knoweft  nought  can  thee  betide 
But  pleases  God. 

The  beft  will  is  our  Father's  will. 
And  we  may  reft  there  calm  and   ftill. 


n 


TruJ}. 

Oh  make  it  hour  by  hour  thine  own, 
And  wifh  for  nought  but  that  alone, 
Which  pleases  God. 

His  thought  is  aye  the  wiseft  thought  ; 
How  oft  man's  wisdom  comes  to  nought ; 
Miftake  or  weaknefs  in   it  lurks, 
It  brings  forth  ill,  and  seldom  works 
What  pleases  God. 

His  mind  is  aye  the  gentleft   mind, 
His  will  and  deeds  are  ever  kind. 
He  blefTes  when  againft  us  speaks 
The  evil  world,  that  rarely  seeks 
What  pleases  God. 

His  heart  is  aye  the  trueft  heart. 
He  bids  all  woe  and  harm  depart, 
Descending,  fhielding  day  and   night 
The  man  who  knows  and  loves  aright 
What  pleases  God. 

He  governs  all  things  here   below, 
In  him  lie  all  our  weal  and  woe, 
He  bears  the  world  within   His  hand, 
And   so  to  us  bear  sea  and  land 
What  pleases  God. 

And  o'er  His  little  flock  He  yearns, 
And  when  to  evil  ways  it  turns, 

7 


97 


98  TrujL 

The  Father's  rod  oft  smiteth   sore, 
Until  it  learns  to  do  once  more 
What  pleases  God. 

What  moft  would  profit  us  He  knows, 
And  ne'er  denies  aught  good   to  those 
Who  with  their  utmoft  ftrength  pursue 
The  right,  and  only  care  to  do 
What  pleases  God. 

If  this  be  so,  then.  World,  from  me 
Keep,  if  thou  wilt,  what  pleases  thee  ; 
But  thou,   my  soul,   be  well  content 
With   God  and  all  things   He  hath  sent ; 
As  pleases   God. 

And   muft  thou   suffer  here  and   there. 
Cling  but  the  firmer  to  His  care. 
For  all  things  are  beneath   His  sway. 
And  muft  in  very  truth  obey 
What  pleases  God. 

True   faith  will  grasp   His  mercy  faft, 
And  hope  bring  patience  at  the  laft. 
Then  both   within  thy  heart  enfhrine, 
So  (hall  the  heritage  be  thine 
That  pleases  God. 

To  thee  for  ever  fhall  be  given 

A   kingdom  and   a  crown  in  heaven. 


IrujL  99 


And  there  fhall  be   fulfill'd  in  thee 
And  thou  fhalt  tafte  and  hear  and  see 
What  pleases  God, 


Paul  Gerhardty   1653. 


ISAIAH,  3:  10. 

WHAT  cheering  words  are  these; 
Their  sweetnefs   who  can  tell  ! 
In  time  and  to  eternal  days, 

"  'T  is  with  the  righteous   well." 

In  every  ftate  secure, 

Kept  as  Jehovah's  eye, 
'T  is  well  with  them  while  life  endures. 

And  well  when  called  to  die. 

Well  when  they  see   His  face. 

Or   fink  amidft  the   flood  ; 
Well  in  affli6lion's  thorny  maze, 

Or  on  the  mount   with  God. 

'T  is  well  when  joys  arise, 

'T  is  well  when  sorrows  flow, 

'T  is  well  when  darknefs   veils  the  fkies. 
And   ftrong  temptations  grow. 


100  Truji. 

'T  is  well  when  Jesus  calls, 
**  From  earth  and  fin  arise, 

To  join  the  hofts  of  ransomed  souls. 
Made  to  salvation  wise." 


EXODUS,  14:  15. 

WHEN  we  cannot  see  our  way. 
Let  us  truft,   and  ftill  obey  j 
He  who  bids  us  forward  go. 
Cannot  fail  the  way  to  fhow. 

Though  the  sea  be  deep  and  wide. 
Though  a  pafTage  seem  denied ; 
Fearlefs  let  us  ftill  proceed, 
Since  the  Lord  vouchsafes  to  lead. 

Though  it  seems  the  gloom  of  night. 
Though  we  see  no  ray  of  light  ; 
Since  the  Lord   Himself  is  there, 
'T  is  not  meet  that  we  fhould  fear. 

Night  with  Him  is  never  night. 
Where  He  is,  there  all  is  light; 
When  He  calls  us,  why  delay? 
They  are  happy  who  obey. 


TruJ}.  I  o  I 

Be  it  ours,  then,  while  we're  here, 
Him   to   follow  without  fear  ! 
Where   He  calls  us,  there  to  go, 
What  He  bids  us,  that  to  do. 

— ©Q!©— 

MATTHEW    14:  28,  29. 

HE  bids  us  come  ;   His  voice  we   know, 
And  boldly  on  the  waters  go. 
To   Him  our  Chrift  and  Lord  ; 
We  walk  on  life's  tempeftuous  sea. 
For  He  who  died  to  set  us   free. 
Hath   called  us  by   His  word. 

Secure  from  troubled  waves  we  tread. 
Nor  all  the   ftorms  around   us  heed, 

While  to  our  Lord  we  look  ; 
O'er  every  fierce  temptation  bound, 
The  billows  yield  a  solid  ground. 

The  wave  is   firm  as  rock. 

But  if  from  Him  we  turn  our  eye. 
And  see  the  raging  floods  run  high. 

And  feel  our  fears  within  ; 
Our  foes  so  ftrong,  our  flefh  so  frail. 
Reason  and   unbelief  prevail. 

And  fink  us  into  fin. 


102  Truji. 

Lord,  we  our  belief  confefs, 
Our  little  spark  of  faith  increase, 

That  we  may  doubt  no  more  j 
But  fix  on  Thee  our  fteady  eye, 
And  on  Thine  outftretched  arm   rely, 

Till  all  the  ftorm  is  o'er. 


THE   QUIET,   HOPING   HEART. 

WHA TE'ER  my  God  ordains  is  right. 
His  will  is  ever  juft  j 
Howe'er  He  order  now  my  cause 
I  will  be  ftill  and  truft. 
He  is  my  God, 
Though  dark  my  road, 
He  holds  me  that  I   fhall  not  fall. 
Wherefore  to  Him  I  leave  it  all. 

Whate'er  my  God  ordains  is  right. 

He  never  will   deceive  ; 
He  leads  me  by  the  proper  path, 
And  so  to  him  I  cleave, 
And  take  content 
What  He  hath  sent ; 
His  hand  can  turn  my  griefs  away, 
And  patiently  I  wait  His  day. 


Truji. 


103 


Whate'er  my  God  ordains  is  right, 

He  talceth  thought  for   me, 
The  cup  that  my  phyfician  gives 
No  poison'd  draught  can  be. 
But  medicine  due  ; 
For  God  is  true. 
And  on  that  changelefs  truth  I  build. 
And  all   my   heart  with  hope  is  filled. 

Whate'er  my   God  ordains   is  right. 
Though   I  the  cup  muft  drink 
That  bitter  seems  to  my  faint  heart, 
I  will  not  fear  nor  fhrink  3 
Tears  pafs  away 
With  dawn  of  day. 
Sweet  comfort  yet  fhall  fill  my  heart, 
And  pain  and  sorrow  fhall  depart. 


Whate'er   my  God  ordains  is  right. 

Here  will  I  take  my  fland  ; 
Though  sorrow,  need,  or  death  make  earth 
For  me  a  desert  land. 
My  Father's  care 
Is  around  me  there. 
He  holds  me  that  I   fhall  not  fall, 
And  so  to  Him  I  leave  it  all. 

S.   Rod'igaji^   1675. 


104  Trujl. 


THE    KINGDOM    OF    GOD. 

I  SAY  to  thee,  do  thou  repeat 
To  the  firft  man  thou  mayeft  meet, 
In  lane,  highway,  or  open  ftreet  — 

That  he,  and  we,   and  all  men  move 

Under  a  canopy  of  Love, 

As  broad  as  the  blue  fky  above  : 

That  doubt  and  trouble^  fear  and  pain^ 
And  anguijh^  all  are  sorrows  vain ; 
That  death  itself  Jhall  not  reinain : 

That  weary  deserts  we  may  tread, 
A  dreary  labyrinth  may  thread. 
Through  dark  ways  underground  be  led  ; 

Yet,  if  we  will  our  Guide  obey. 
The  drearieft  path,   the  darkeft  way. 
Shall  ifTue  out  in  heavenly  day. 

And  we.y  on  divers  Jhores  noiu  caji^ 
Shall  ?neet^  our  perilous  voyage  pajl^ 
All  in  our   Father' s  ho7ne  at  lajl. 


Truji. 


105 


And  ere  thou  leave  them,  say  thou  this, 
Yet  one  word  more  :  —  They  only  mifs 
The  winning  of  that  final  blifs 

Who  will   not  count  it  true  that  Love, 
Blefling,  not  curfing,  rules  above, 
And  that  in  it  we  live  and   move. 

And  one  thing  further  make  him  know. 
That  to  believe  these  things  are  so. 
This   firm  faith  never  to  forego  — 

Despite  of  all   which   seems  at  ftrife 
With  blefling,  and   with  curses  rife  — 
That  this  is  blefling,  this  is  life. 

Trench 


MY    FATHER'S    AT    THE    HELM. 

yr  I  ">WAS  when  the  sea's  tremendous  roar 

X      A  little  bark  afiailed  ; 
And  pallid  fear,  with  awful  power, 

O'er  each  on  board  prevailed  : 


Save  one,  the  captain's  darling  son. 
Who  fearlefs  viewed  the  ftorm. 

And  playful,  with  composure  smiled 
At  danger's  threatening  form. 


io6 


Trujl. 


*'  Why  sporting  thus,"  a  seaman  cried, 
"  Whilft  sorrows  overwhelm  ?  " 

**  Why  yield  to  grief!"   the  boy  replied, 
'''-My   Father's  at  the  helm.'" 

Despairing  soul !   from  thence  be  taught, 

How  groundlefs  is  thy  fear  ; 
Think  on  what  wonders  Chrift  has  wrought. 

And  He  is  always  near. 

Safe  in   His   hands,  whom  seas  obey, 

When  swelling  billows  rise  ; 
Who  turns  the  darkeft  night  to  day. 

And  brightens  lowering  fkies  : 

Though  thy  corruptions  rise  abhorred, 

And  outward   foes  increase  ; 
'T  is  but  for  Him  to  speak  the  word, 

And  all  is  huflied  to  peace. 


Then  upward  look,  howe'er  diftrefled, 
Jesus   will  guide  thee  home. 

To  that  bleft  port  of  endlefs  reft, 
Where  ftorms  fhall  never  come. 


Trusji  107 


GRACE  OF  GOD. 

GRACE  does  not  fteel  the  faithful  heart, 
That   it  fhould   know  no  ill  : 
We  learn  to  kifs  the  chaftening  rod, 
And  feel  its  fharpnefs  ftill. 

But,   ever  as  the  wound  is  given. 

There  is  a   hand   unseen, 
Hafting  to  wipe  away  the   scar, 

And   hide  where  it  hath  been. 

The  Chriftian  would  not  have  his  lot 

Be  other  than  it  is  ; 
For,  while  his  Father  rules  the  world. 

He  knows  that  world  is  his. 

He  knows  that  He  who  gave  the  beft, 

Will  give  him  all  befidej 
Aflured  that  every  good  he  afks 
Is   evil,  if  denied. 

When  clouds  of  sorrow  gather  round. 

His  bosom  owns  no  fear  : 
He  knows,  whate'er  his  portion  be. 

His  God  will  ftill  be  there. 


io8  TruJ}. 

And  when  the  threatened  ftorm  has  burft, 

Whate'er  the  trial  be, 
Something  yet  whispers  him  within, 

"Be  ftill,  for  it  is   He!" 

Poor  nature,  ever  weak,  will  fhrink 

From  the  affli6live  ftroke, 
But  faith   disclaims  the  hafty  plaint 

Impatient  nature  spoke. 

He  knows   it  is  a  Father's  will, 

And  therefore  it  is  good  : 
Nor  would  he  venture,  by  a  wifh, 

To  change  it  if  he  could. 


t>^ 


His  grateful  bosom  quickly  learns 

Its  sorrows  to  disown  ; 
Yields  to  His  pleasure,  and  forgets 

The  choice  was  not  his  own. 

Caroline  Fry. 


rruj}. 


109 


RESIGNATION. 
I   Peter  5:7. 

LORD,  it  belongs  not  to  my  care, 
Whether  I  die  or  live  : 
To  love  and  serve  thee  is  my  fhare. 

And   this  thy  grace  muft  give. 
If  life  be  long,  I  will  be  glad. 

That  I   may  long  obey  ; 
If  fhort,  yet  why  fhould  I  be  sad 
To  soar  to  endlefs  day  ? 

Chrift  leads  me  through  no  darker  rooms 

Than  he  went  through  before  ; 
He  that  into  God's  kingdom  comes, 

Muft  enter  by  his  door. 
Come,  Lord,  when  grace  has  made  me  meet 

Thy  bleffed   face  to  see ; 
For  if  thy  work  on  earth   be  sweet, 

What  will  thy  glory  be  ? 

Then  fhall  I   end  my  sad  complaints, 

And   weary,   fmful  days ; 
And  join  with  the  triumphant  saints, 

That  fmg  Jehovah's  praise. 


no  TruJ}. 

My  knowledge  of  that  life  is  small, 

The  eye  of  faith  is  dim  ; 
But  't  is  enough  that  Chrift  knows  all, 

And  I  fhall  be  with  him. 

R,  Baxter, 


PEACE  has  unveiled  her  smiling  face. 
And  woos  thy  soul  to  her  embrace  : 
Enjoyed  with   ease,  if  thou  refrain 
From  earthly  love  ;   else   sought  in  vain. 
She  dwells  with  all  who  truth  prefer, 
But  seeks  not  them  who  seek  not  her. 

Yield  to  the  Lord,  with  fimple  heart, 
All  that  thou  haft,  and  all  thou  art ; 
Renounce   all  ftrength,  but  ftrength  divine, 
And  peace  (hall  be  forever  thine  ; 
Behold  the  paths  the  saints  have  trod, 
The  paths  which  led  them   home  to  God. 

Madame  Guy  on  ^    1648-1717. 


TrujL 


1  1 1 


THE    PEACE    OF   GOD. 

O   PEACE  of  God,  sweet  peace  of  God  ! 
Where  broods   on  earth  this  gentle  dove  ? 
Where  spread  those  pure  and   downy  wings 
To   fhelter  him  whom  God  doth  love  ? 

Whence  comes   this  bleffing  of  the  soul, 
This  filent  joy  which  cannot  fade  ? 
This  glory,  tranquil,  holy,  bright, 
Pervading  sorrow's  deepeft  ftiade  ? 

The  peace  of  God,  the  peace  of  God  ! 
It  fhines  as  clear  'mid   cloud  and  ftorm 
As   in  the  calmeft  summer  day, 
'Mid  chill  as  in  the  sunlight  warm. 


O  peace  of  God  !   earth  hath  no  power 
To  fhed  thine  undlion  o'er  the  heart  j 
Its  smile  can  never  bring  it  here, — 
Its  frown  ne'er  bid  its  light  depart. 

Calm  peace  of  God,   in  holy  truft. 

In  love  and  faith,  thy  presence  dwells, - 

In  patient  suffering  and  toil 

Where  Mercy's  gentle  tear-drop  swells. 


112  Trujl. 

Sweet  peace,  I  see  thy  heavenly  ray. 
And  long  to  light  my  taper  there  ; 
Then  fhould  I  meet  the  cares  of  life, 
Like  angels,  answering  to  prayer. 

Monthly  Religious  Magazine. 


Affiia'ion. 


^^3 


AFFLICTION. 


-f-as8" 


WORK. 


WHAT  are  we  set  on  earth  for?     Say,  to  toil- 
Nor  seek  to  leave  thy  tending  of  the  vines, 
For  all  the  heat  o'  the  day,  till  it  declines, 
And   Death's   wild  curfew  fhall  from   work  aJToil. 
God  did  anoint  thee  with   his  odorous  oil, 
To  wreftle,  not  to  reign  \  and   He  affigns 
All  thy  tears  over,  like  pure  cryftallines. 
For  younger  fellow-workers  of  the  soil 
To  wear  for  amulets.      So  others  fhall 
Take  patience,  labor,  to  their  heart  and  hand, 
From  thy  heart,  and  thy  hand,   and  thy  brave  cheer. 
And   God's  grace  fru61:ify  through  thee  to  all. 
The  leaft  flower,  with  a  brimming  cup  may  ftand. 
And  fhare  its  dew-drop  with  another  near. 

Mrs.  E.  B.  Browning. 


114 


A_ffi'i£i'ton. 


LORD,    fhall    we     grumble    when    thy    flames     do 
scourge  us  ? 
Our  fins  breathe  fire  ;  that  fire  returns  to  purge  us. 
Lord,  what  an  alchymift  art  thou,  whose  fkill 
Transmutes  to  perfed  good   from  perfed:  ill! 

Francis  Quarks. 


DISCIPLINE. 

TREMBLE   not,  though  darkly  gather 
Clouds  and  tempefts  o'er  thy  (ky, 
Still  believe  thy   Heavenly  Father 

Loves  thee  beft  when  ftorms  are  nigh. 

When  the  sun   of  fortune  fhineth 
Long  and  brightly  on  the  heart, 

Soon  its  fruitfulnefs  declineth, 
Parched  and  dry  in  every  part. 


Then  the  plants  of  grace  have  faded 

In  the  dry  and  burning  soil  ; 
Thorns  and  briers  their  growth  have  fhaded' 

Earthly  cares  and  earthly  toil. 


Affii£iion.  1 1 5 

But  the  clouds  are  seen  ascending  ; 

Soon  the  heavens  are  overcaft ; 
And  the  weary  heart  is  bending 

'Neath  afflidion's  ftormy  blaft. 

Yet  the  Lord,  on  high  prefiding, 

Rules  the  ftorm  with  powerful   hand ; 

He  the  fhower  of  grace  is  guiding, 
To  the  dry  and   barren  land. 

See,  at  length  the  clouds  are  breaking  — 

Tempefts  have  not  paff'd  in  vain  ; 
For  the  soul,  revived,  awaking, 

Bears  its  fruit  and  flowers  again. 

Love  divine  has  seen  and  counted 

Every  tear  it  caus'd  to  fall. 
And  the  ftorm  which  love  appointed. 

Was  its  choiceft  gift  of  all. 


^x-^OO^)^-*^ 


RESIGNATION. 

IN  trouble  and  in  grief,  O  God, 
Thy  smile  hath   cheered  my  way ; 
And  joy  hath  budded   from  each  thorn 
That  round  my  footfteps  lay. 


ii6  Affliaion. 

The  hours  of  pain  have  yielded  good, 
Which  prosperous  days  refused  j 

As  herbs,  though  scentlefs  when  entire, 
Spread  fragrance  when  they're  bruised. 

The  oak  ftrikes  deeper,  as  its  boughs 
By  furious  blafts  are  driven  ; 

So  life's  viciflitudes  the  more 

Have  fixed  my  heart  in  heaven. 

All-gracious  Lord  !    whate'er  my  lot 

In  other  times  may  be, 
I'll  welcome  ftill  the  heavieft  grief 

That  brings  me  near  to  thee. 


THY  WILL   BE    DONE. 

"  It  is  the  Lord  ;  let  him  do  what  seemeth  to  him  good."     i  Sam.  3  :   18. 

MY  Jesus,  as  Thou  wilt! 
Oh !  may  Thy  will  be  mine  ! 
Into  Thy  hand  of  love 

I  would  my  all  refign. 
Through   sorrow,  or  through  joy, 

Condu6l  me  as  Thine  own. 
And  help  me  ftill  to  say. 

My  Lord,  Thy  will  be  done  ! 


Affiiaion.  117 

My  Jesus,  as  Thou  wilt! 

If  needy   here  and   poor, 
Give  me  Thy  people's  bread, 

Their  portion  rich   and  sure. 
The  manna  of  Thy  word 

Let  my   soul   feed   upon  ; 
And  if  all  else  (hould  fail  — 

My  Lord,  Thy  will   be  done  ! 

My  Jesus,  as  Thou  wilt  ! 

If  among  thorns  I  go. 
Still  sometimes  here  and   there 

Let  a  it^N  roses  blow. 
But  Thou  on  earth,  along 

The  thorny  path  haft  gone, 
Then  lead  me  after  Thee  ; 

My  Lord,  Thy  will  be  done  ! 

My  Jesus,  as  Thou  wilt ! 

Though  seen  through   many  a  tear. 
Let  not  my  ftar  of  hope 

Grow  dim  or  disappear. 
Since  Thou  on  earth   haft  wept 

And  sorrowed  oft  alone. 
If  I   muft  weep  with  Thee, 

My  Lord,  Thy  will  be  done  ! 

My  Jesus,  as  Thou  wilt! 
If  loved  ones  muft  depart, 


1 1 8  Affliaion. 

Suffer  not  sorrow's  flood 

To  overwhelm  my  heart ; 
For  they  are.  bleft  with  Thee, 

Their  race  and  conflict  won  : 
Let  me  but  follow  them  ; 

My   Lord,  Thy  will  be  done  ! 

My  Jesus,  as  Thou  wilt! 

When  death  itself  draws  nigh, 
To  thy  dear  wounded  fide 

I  would   for  refuge  fly. 
Leaning  on  Thee,  to  go 

Where  Thou  before   hafl  gone ; 
The  reft  as  Thou   (halt  please. 

My  Lord,  Thy  will  be  done  ! 

My  Jesus,  as  Thou  wilt ! 

All  fhall  be  well  for  me  : 
Each  changing  future  scene, 

I  gladly  truft  with  Thee. 
Straight  to  my  home  above 

I  travel  calmly  on. 
And  fmg,  in  life  or  death. 

My  Lord,  Thy  will  be  done  ! 

B.  Schmolk, 


Affiiaion. 


119 


SUFFERING   WITH    CHRIST. 

LONG  plunged  in  sorrow,  I  refign 
My  soul  to  that  dear  hand  of  Thine, 
Without  reserve   or   fear  ; 
That  hand  fhall  wipe  my  ftreaming  eyes. 
Or  into   smiles  of  glad  surprise, 
Transform  the  falling  tear  ! 

My  sole  pofleflion  is  Thy  love  : 
In  earth  beneath,  or  heaven  above, 

I   have   no  other  flore  : 
And  though  with  fervent  suit  I  pray, 
And  importune  thee  night  and  day, 

I  afk  thee  nothing  more. 

My  hours  with  undiminifhed   force 
And   speed  pursue  their  deftined  course. 

Obedient  to  Thy  will : 
Nor  would   I   murmur  at  my  doom. 
Though  flill  a  sufferer  from  the  womb. 

And  doomed  to  suffer  ftill. 


By  Thy  command,  where'er  I  ftray, 
Sorrow  attends  me  all  my  way, 
A  never  failing  friend  ; 


J  20  Jffiiifion. 

And  if  my  sufferings  may  augment 
Thy  praise,  behold   me  well  content  — 
Let  sorrow  ftill  attend  ! 

It  cofts  me  no  regret,  that  fhe 

Who  followed  Chrift  {hould  follow  me ; 

And  though,  where'er  she  goes, 
Thorns  spring  spontaneous   at  her  feet, 
I  love  her,  and  extract  a  sweet 

From  all  my  bitter  woes. 


Mad.   Guyon 


THE    SAFE    REFUGE. 

COURAGE,  my  sorely-tempted  heart  ! 
Break  through  thy  woes,  forget  their  smart  ; 
Come  forth  and  on  thy  Bridegroom  gaze  ; 
The  Lamb  of  God,  the  Fount  of  grace  : 
Here  is  thy  place  ! 

His  arms  are  open,  thither  flee  ! 
There  reft  and  peace  are  waiting  thee. 
The  deathlefs  crown  of  righteousnefs, 
The  entrance   to  eternal  blifs  : 

He  gives  thee  this  ! 

Then  combat  well,  of  nought  afraid, 
For  thus   His  follower  thou  art  made. 


A^i£lion.  12  1 

Each  battle  teaches  thee  to   fight, 
Each  foe  to  be  a  braver  knight, 

Armed   with  His  might. 

If  ftorms  of  fierce  temptation   rise. 
Unmoved   we  '11   face   the   frowning  fkies  ; 
If  but   the    heart  is   true   indeed, 
Chriil  will  be  with  us  in  our  need, — 

His  own  could  bleed. 

The  word  hath  ftill  its  glorious  powers, 
The  nobleft  chivalry  is  ours  \ 

0  Thou,  for  whom  to  die  is  gain, 

1  bring  Thee  here   my  all,  oh  deign 

To  accept  and  reign ! 

J.    H.   Bohmer.    1704. 


FOR    A    WAKEFUL    NIGHT. 

NOW  darknefs  over  all  is  spread, 
No  sounds  the  ftillnefs  break  ; 
Ah  when  fhall  these  sad  hours  be  fled 
Am  I  alone  awake  ? 


Ah  no,  I  do  not  wake  alone, 

Alone  I  do  not  fleep. 
Around  me  ever  watcheth   One 

Who  wakes   with   those  who  weep. 


122  JjffiiSfion. 

On  earth  it  is  so  dark  and  drear, 
With   Him   so  calm  and  bright ; 

The  ftars,  in  solemn   radiance  clear, 
Shine  there  through  all  our  night. 

'T  is  when  the  lights  of  earth  are  gone 

The  heavenly  glories  fhine  ; 
When  other  comfort  I   have  none, 

Thy  comfort,  Lord,  is  mine. 

Be  ftill,  my  throbbing  heart,  be  ftill  ; 

Caft  off  thy  weary  load, 
And  make   His  holy  will  thy  willy 

And  reft  upon  thy  God. 

How  many  a  time  the  night  hath  come, 

Yet  ftill  return'd  the  day ; 
How  many  a  time  thy  crofs,   thy  gloom, 

Ere  now  hath  paff'd  away. 

And  these  dark  hours  of  anxious  pain 
That  now  opprefs  me  sore, 
.     I   know  will   vanifli  soon  again, 
Then  I  fliall  fear  no   more  : 

For  when  the  night  hath  lafted  long. 

We  know  the  morn  is  near  ; 
And  when  the  trial  's  ftiarp  and  ftrong. 

Our  Help  fliall  soon  appear. 

Pajior  yosephsen. 


Affiiak 


123 


LIGHT   ARISING   OUT   OF  DARKNESS. 


CHILDREN  of  God,  who  pacing  flow, 
Your  pilgrim  path  pursue, 
In  ftrength  and  weaknefs,  joy  and  woe. 
To  God's  high  calling  true  — 

Why  move  you  thus,  with  lingering  tread, 

A  doubtful,   mournful  band  ? 
Why  faintly  hangs  the  drooping  head  ? 
Why  fails  the  feeble  hand  ? 

Oh,  weak  to  know  a  Saviour's  power, 

To  feel  a  Father's  care  ; 
A  moment's  toil,  a  paffing  fhower, 

Is  all  the  grief  ye  fhare. 

The  Lord  of  Light,  though,  veiled  awhile. 

He  hides  his  noontide  ray. 
Shall  soon  in  lovelier  beauty  smile. 

To  gild  the  clofing  day  j 

And,  burfting  through  the  dufky  fhroud. 

That  dared  his  power  inveft. 
Rise  throned  in  light  o'er  every  cloud, 

And  guide  you   to  his  reft. 

Bawdier. 


124  AjfliSiion. 


AFFLICTION. 

PEACE,  peace  :   it  is  not  so.      Thou  doft  miscall 
Thy  phyfick  ;  pills  that  change 
Thy  fick  acceffions  into  settled  health  ; 
This  is  the  great  elixir  that  turns  gall 
To  wine  and  sweetnefs,  poverty  to  wealth, 
And  brings  man  home  when  he  doth  range. 
Did  not  He  who  ordain'd  the  day, 

Ordain  night  too  ? 
And  in  the  greater  world  display 
What  in  the  lefTer  he  would  do  ? 
All  flefli  is   clay,  thou  know'ft  ;   and  but  that  God 

Doth   use  his  rod. 
And  by  a  fruitfuU  change  of  froft  and  fhowres, 

Cherifh  and  bind   thy  pow'rs, 
Thou  would'ft  to  weeds  and   thirties  quite  disperse. 

And  be   more  wild  than  is  thy  verse. 
Sicknefs  is  wholesome,  crofles  are  but  curbs 

To  check  the  mule,  unruly  man  ; 
They  are  heaven's  hufbandry,  the  famous  fan, 

Purging  the  floor  which  chafF  difturbs. 
Were  all  the  year  one  conftant  sunfhine,  wee 

Should  have  no  flowres; 
All  would  be  drought  and  leannefs  ;  not  a  tree 
Would  make  us  bowres. 


Affllaion. 


125 


Beauty  confifts  in  colours;  and  that's  beft 
Which  is  not  fixt,  but  flies  and  flowes. 
The  settled  red  is  dull,  and  whites  that  reft 
Something  of  ficknefs  would  disclose. 
Viciflitude  plaies  all  the  game  j 
Nothing  that  ftirrs, 
Or  hath  a  name, 
But  waits   upon  this  wheel  j 
Kingdomes  too  have  their  phyfick,  and   for  fleel 
Exchange  their  peace  and  furrs. 
Thus  doth  God  key  disorder'd  man, 

Which  none  else  can, 
Tuning  his  brefl  to  rise  or  fall  j 
And  by  a  sacred,  needfull  art 
Like  ftrings,   ftretch  ev'ry  part. 
Making  the  whole  most   musicall. 

Henry  Vaughan.      1621-1695. 


-c«Ca5X(J>>:>- 


DIVERS    PROVIDENCES. 


WHEN  all  the  year  our  fields  are  frefh  and  green, 
And  while  sweet  fhowers  and  sunfhine,  every  day, 
As  oft  as  need  requireth,  come  between 

The  heavens   and  earth,  they  heedlefs  pafs  away. 
The  fullnefs  and  continuance  of  a  blefling 
Doth  make  us  to  be  senselefs  of  the  good  ; 


126  Jffliaion. 

And  if  sometimes  it  fly  not  our  poffefling, 

The  sweetnefs  of  it  is  not  underftood  ; 
Had  we  no  winter,  summer  would  be  thought 

Not  half  so  pleafing ;   and  if  tempefts  were  not, 
Such  comforts   by  a  calm  could  not  be  brought ; 

For  things,  save  by  their  oppofites,  appear  not. 
Both  health  and  wealth  are  tafteless  unto  some, 

And  so  is  ease  and  every  other  pleasure, 
Till  poor,  or  fick,  or  grieved,   they  become, 

And  then  they  relifh  these  in  ampler  measure. 
God,  therefore,  full  of  kind,  as   He  is  wise. 

So  tempereth  all  the  favours   He  will  do  us. 
That  we  his  bounties  may  the  better  prize, 

And  make  his  chaflisements  lefs  bitter  to  us. 
One  while  a  scorching  indignation  burns 

The  flowers  and  blofToms  of  our  hopes  away. 
Which   into  scarcity  our  plenty  turns. 

And  changeth  new-mown  grafs  to  parched  hay  ; 
Anon  his  fruitful  fhowers  and  pleafmg  dews. 

Commixed  with  cheerful  rays.   He  sendeth  down. 
And  then  the  barren  earth  her  crops  renews. 

Which,  with  rich   harvefls,  hills  and  valleys  crown  ; 
For,   as  to  relifh  joys.   He  sorrow  sends  ; 
So  comfort  on  temptation  ftill  attends. 

George  Wither. 


Affl'iSiion.  127 


INCOMPLETENESS. 

NOTHING  refting  in  its  own  completenefs, 
Can  have  worth  or  beauty  :   but  alone 
Because  it  leads  and  tends  to  farther  sweetnefs, 
Fuller,  higher,  deeper  than  its  own. 

Spring's  real  glory  dwells  not  in  the  meaning. 
Gracious  though  it  be,  of  her  blue  hours  : 

But  is  hidden  in  her  tender  leaning 

Towards  the  summer's  richer  wealth  of  flowers. 

Dawn  is  fair,  because  her  mifts  fade  flowly 
Into  day,   which  floods  the  world  with  light ; 

Twilight's  myftery  is  so  sweet  and   holy, 
Juft  because  it  ends   in  ftarry  night. 

Life  is  only  bright  when  it  proceedeth 
Towards  a  truer,  deeper  Life  above  ; 

Human  love  is  sweeteft  when  it  leadeth 
To  a  more  divine  and  perfe6t  love. 

Childhood's   smiles  unconscious  graces  borrow 
From  ftrife  that   in   a   far-off  future  lies  ; 

And  angel  glances   veiled   now  by  life's  sorrow. 
Draw  our  hearts  to  some  beloved   eyes. 


128  Affilaion. 

Learn  the  myftery  of  progreffion  duly  ; 

Do  not  call  each   glorious  change  decay  j 
But  know  we  only  hold  our  treasures  truly, 

When  it  seems  as  if  they  pafTed  away. 

Nor  dare  to  blame  God's  gifts  for  incompletenefs ; 

In  that  want  their  beauty  lies  ;  they  roll 
Towards  some  infinite  depth  of  love  and  sweetnefs, 

Bearing  onward  man's  reluftant  soul. 

M'lfs  A.  A,  Proaor. 


LINES 

WRITTEN    AFTER    HEARING    SOME    BEAUTIFUL    SINGING    IN   A    CONVENT- 
CHURCH    AT    ROME. 

SWEET  voices  !  seldom  mortal  ear 
Strains  of  such  potency  might  hear ; 
My   soul  that  liftened,  seemed  quite  gone, 
Dissolved  in  sweetnefs,  and  anon 
I  was  borne   upward,  till  I  trod 
Among  the  hierarchy   of  God. 
And  when  they  ceased,  as  time  mufi:  bring 
An  end  to  every  sweeteft  thing. 
With  what  relucSlancy  came  back 
My  spirits  to  their  wonted   track. 
And  how  I  loathed  the  common  life  — 
The  daily  and  recurring  ftrife 


Affliaion. 

With  petty   ilns,  the  lowly  road, 
And  being's  ordinary  load  ! 
—  Why,  after  such  a  solemn   mood, 
Should  any   meaner   thought   intrude  ? 
Why  will  not  heaven   hereafter  give. 
That  we  for  evermore  may  live 
Thus   at  our  spirit's   topmoft   bent  ? 
So  alked   I   in   my  discontent. 


129 


But  give   me,  Lord,  a  wiser  heart; 
These  seasons  come,  and  they  depart  — 
These  seasons,  and  those  higher  ftill. 
When  we  are  given  to  have  our  fill 
Of  flrength,  and  life,  and  joy  with  thee. 
And  brightnefs  of  thy  face  to  see  ! 
They  come,  or  we  could  never  guefs 
Of  heaven's   sublimer  blefTednefs  ; 
They  come,  to  be  our  ftrength  and  cheer 
In  other  times,  in  doubt  or  fear. 
Or  fhould  our  solitary  way 
Lie   through   the  desert   many  a  day. 
They  go  —  they  leave   us  blank  and  dead. 
That  we   may  learn,   when   they   are   fled. 
We  are  but  vapors  which   have  won 
A  moment's  brightnefs   from  the  sun. 
And  which  it  may  at  pleasure  fill 
With  splendor,  or  unclothe  at  will. 
Well  for  us  they  do  not  abide. 
Or  we  fhould  lose  ourselves  in  pride. 
And  be  as  angels  —  but  as  they 

9 


130  AffliBion. 

Who  on  the  battlements  of  day 

Walked,  gazing  on  their  power  and  might, 

Till  they  grew  giddy  in  their  height. 

Then  welcome  every  nobler  time, 
When  out  of  reach  of  earth's  dull  chime 
'T  is  ours  to  drink  with   purged  ears 
The  mufic  of  the  solemn  spheres. 
Or  in  the  desert  to  have  fight 
Of  those   enchanted  cities  bright, 
Which  sensual  eye  can  never  see  : 
Thrice   welcome  may  such  seasons  be  ; 
But  welcome  too  the  common  way. 
The  lowly  duties  of  the  day. 
And  all  which   makes  and  keeps  us  low, 
Which   teaches  us  ourselves  to  know. 
That  we  who  do  our  lineage  high 
Draw  from  beyond  the  ftarry  fky. 
Are  yet  upon  the  other  fide  — 
To  earth  and  to  its   duft  allied. 


Trench. 


Jffliaio 


131 


ON    THE    DEATH    OF    A    CHILD. 

WHEN  I  can  truft   my  all  with  God, 
In  trial's  fearful  hour, 
Bow  all  refigned  beneath   his  rod. 

And  blefs  his  sparing  power  5 
A  joy  springs  up  amid  diftrefs, 
A   fountain  in  the  wildernefs. 

Oh  !   to  be  brought  to  Jesus'   feet, 

Though  sorrows  fix  me  there, 
Is  ftill  a  privilege  ;  and   sweet 

The  energies  of  prayer. 
Though  fighs  and  tears  its  language  be, 
If  Chrift  be  nigh,  and   smile  on   me. 

An  earthly   mind,  a  faithlefs  heart. 

He  sees  with   pitying  eye  ; 
He  will  not  let  his  grace  depart  ; 

But,  kind  severity  ! 
He  takes  a  hoftage  of  our  love 
To  draw  the  parent's  heart  above. 


There  ftands  our  child  before  the  Lord, 

In  royal  vefture  dreft  ; 
A  vi6tor  ere  he  drew  the  sword. 

Ere  he  had  toiled  at  reft. 


'3^ 


Affllak 


No  doubts  this  blefled  faith  bedim  : 
We  know  that  Jesus  died  for  him. 

Oh  blefled  be  the  hand  that  gave  j 

Still  blefled  when  it  takes. 
BleflTed  be   He  who  smites  to  save, 

Who  heals  the  heart  he  breaks. 
Perfedl  and  true  are  all  his  ways, 
Whom  Heaven  adores,  and  Death  obeys. 

Cornier. 


Patience.  133 


PATIENCE. 


— 2-S^Se<~ 


DEAR  Jesus,  give  me  patience  here, 
And  faith  to  see  my  crown  as  near, 
And  almoft  reach'd  ;  because  't  is  sure 
If  I  hold   faft,  and   flight  the  lure. 
Give  me  humility  and  peace. 
Contented  thoughts,  innoxious  ease, 
A  sweet,  revengelefs,  quiet  minde. 
And  to  my  greateft  haters  kinde. 
Give  me,  my  God  !   a  heart  as   milde 
And  plain,  as  when  I  was  a  childe. 
That  when  my  throne  is  set,  and   all 
These  conquerors  before  it  fall, 
I   may  be  found   preserv'd  by  thee 
Amongft  the  chosen  company, 
Who  by  no  blood   here  overcame 
But  the  blood  of  the  blefTed   Lamb. 

Henry  Vaughan. 


1 34  Patience. 


WAITING   FOR    CHRIST. 

UNCHANGEABLE,  Almighty  Lord, 
The  true,  and   merciful,  and  juft. 
Be  mindful  of  thy  gracious  word. 
Wherein  thou  causeft   me  to  truft. 

My  weary  eyes  look  out  in   vain. 
And  long  thy  saving  health  to  see  ; 

But  known  to   thee   is  all  my  pain. 

When  wilt  thou  come  and  comfort  me  ? 

Prisoner  of  hope,  to  thee  I  turn  ; 

Thee  my  ftrong  hold,  and  only  flay ; 
Harden'd  in  grief,  I  ever  mourn : 

Why  do  thy  chariot-wheels  delay  ? 

But  fhall  thy  creature  afk   thee  why? 

No  ;   I  retracSt  the  eager  prayer  ; 
Lord,  as   thou  wilt,   and   not  as   I  ; 

I  cannot  choose  :   thou  canft  not  err. 

To  thee,  the  only  wise  and  true, 

See  then  at  laft  I  all  refign  ; 
Make  me  in  Chrift  a  creature  new. 

The  manner  and  the  time  be  thine. 


Patience. 

Only  preserve  my  soul  from  sin, 
Nor  let  me   faint   for  want  of  thee  ; 

I  '11  wait  'till  thou  appear  ivlthin^ 

And  plant  thy   heaven  of  love  in  me. 


THE    ANGEL   OF   PATIENCE. 


'35 


IVeJley. 


A 


"  Ye  have  need  of  patience.'"  —  Heb.  lo  :   36. 
GENTLE  Ano-el  walketh    throughout  a  world   of 


With   melTages  of  mercy  to  mourning  hearts  below  ; 
His   peaceful   smile  invites  them  to   love  and   to   confide, 
Oh  !   follow  in   His   footfteps,  keep  closely  by   His  fide  ! 

So   gently  will    He  lead   thee   through  all  the  cloudy  day, 
And   whisper  of  glad-tidings   to  cheer  the  pilgrim-way; 
His  courage  never  failing,  when  thine  is  almofl  gone. 
He  takes  thy   heavy  burden,  and   helps  to  bear  it  on. 

To  soft  and  tearful  sadnefs   He  changes  dumb  despair. 
And  soothes  to   deep    submiffion  the  ftorm   of  grief  and 

care  ; 
Where    midnight     (hades    are    brooding.    He    pours    the 

light  of  noon. 
And    every   grievous    wound    He    heals,    mod    surely,   if 

not  soon. 


136  Patience. 

He   will    not  blame    thy  sorrows,   while    He    brings   the 

healing  balm  ; 
He  does  not  chide  thy  longings,  while  He  soothes  them 

into  calm  ; 
And  when  thy  heart  is    murmuring,   and    wildly  aflcing 

why  ? 
He  smiling  beckons  forward,  points  upward  to  the  fky. 

He  will  not  always  answer  thy  queftions  and  thy  fear. 
His    watchword    is,  "  Be    patient,  thy  journey's    end    is 

near  !  " 
And    ever   through   the    toilsome    way.   He    tells   of  joys 

to  come, 
And  points  the  pilgrim  to  his  reft,  the  wanderer  to  his 

home. 

Spttta. 


GOD'S   ANVIL. 

PAIN'S  furnace-heat  within  me  quivers, 
God's  breath  upon  the  flame  doth  blow, 
And  all   my  heart  in  anguifh  fhivers. 

And  trembles  at  the  fiery  glow  ; 
And  yet  I  whisper  —  as  God  will! 
And   in  his  hotteft   fire,  hold   ftill. 

He  comes  and  lays  my  heart,  all  heated. 
On  the  hard  anvil,  minded  so 


137 


Patience. 

Into  his  own  fair  fliape  to  beat  it 

With  his  great  hammer,  blow  on  blow ; 
And  yet   I   whisper  —  as   God    will  ! 
And   at   his   heavieil   blows,   hold   ftill. 

He  takes  my  softened  heart  and  beats  it ; 

The  sparks  fly  off  at  every  blow  ; 
He  turns  it  o'er  and  o'er,  and    heats  it, 

And  lets   it  cool,  and   makes  it  glow  j 
And  yet   I  whisper  —  as  God  will! 
And,   in   his   mighty   hand,   hold   ftill. 

Why  fhould  I  murmur  ?  for  the  sorrow 
Thus   only  longer  lived  would  be  ; 

Its  end  may  come,  and  will,  to-morrow, 
When  God  has  done  his  work  in  me ; 

So  I  say,  trufting  —  as  God  will! 

And,  trufting  to  the  end,  hold  ftill. 


He  kindles  for  my  profit  purely 

Afflictions  glowing,   fiery  brand, 
And  all  his  heavieft  blows  are   surely 

Inflicted  by  a  Mafter  hand  ; 
So  I  say,  praying — as   God  will! 
And  hope  in  him,  and  suffer  ftill. 

Julius  Sturm. 


138 


Patience. 


HOPE. 


ANGELS    fhall    free    the    feet    from    ftain,    to    their 
own   hue  of  snow, 
If,    undismayed,    we    reach    the     hills     where     the     true 

olives  grow  j 
The    olive-groves    which    we    muft    seek    in    cold     and 

damp. 
Alone  can  yield  us  oil  for  a  perpetual  lamp  ; 
Then   sound    again    the  golden    horn,  with   promise  ever 

new, 
The    princely    doe    will    ne'er    be    caught    by   those   that 

flack  pursue, 
Yet  the  "White    Doe"  of   angel  hopes   be  always  kept 

in   view. 
Yes  !    sound  again  the  horn  of  Hope,  the  golden  horn  ! 
Answer  it,  flutes  and   pipes,  from  valleys  ftill   and  lone; 
Warders  from  your    high   towers,  with   trumps    of  silver 

scorn. 
And  harps    in    maiden's   bowers,  with    firings  from   deep 

hearts   torn, 
All  answer  to  the  horn  of  Hope,  the  golden  horn  ! 


Patience.  139 


'  WAIT. 

WAIT!  for  the  day  is  breaking, 
Though  the  dull  night  be  long  : 
Wait !   God  is   not  forsaking 
Thy   heart.     Be  ftrong — be  ftrong! 

Wait  !   and  the  clouds  of  sorrow 
Shall   melt  in  gentle  fhowers, 
And  hues  from  heaven  fhall  borrow, 
As  they  fall  amidft  the   flowers. 

Wait  !  't  is  the  key  to  pleasure 
And  to  the  plan  of  God  ; 
O,  tarry  thou  His  leisure, 
Thy  soul  fhall  bear  no  load. 

Wait  !   for  the  time  is  hafting 
When  life   fhall  be  made  clear, 
And  all  who  know  heart-wafling 
Shall  feel  that  God  is  dear. 

Chauncy  Hare  Townsend. 


140 


Patience. 


WAITING. 

I 

JESUS'  hour  is  not  yet  come  ;  " 
Let  this  word  thine  answer  be. 
Pilgrim  afking  for  thy  home, 

Longing  to  be  bleft  and  free. 
Yet  a  season  tarry  on  — 
Nobly  borne  is  nobly  done. 

While  opprefling  cares  and  fears, 
Night  and  day  no  respite  leave, 

Still  prolonged  through   many  years. 
None  to  help  thee  or  relieve, 

Hold  the  word  of  promise   faft. 

Till  deliverance  comes  at  laft. 

Every  creature-hope  and  truft, 
Every  earthly  prop  or  ftay. 

May  lie  proftrate  in  the  duft. 

May  have  failed  or  pafTed  away  ; 

Then  when  darkest  falls  the  night, 

Jesus  comes,  and  all  is  light. 


Yes,  the  Comforter  draws  nigh 
To  the  breaking,  burfting  heart. 

For,  with  tender  sympathy. 

He  has  seen  and   felt  its  smart: 


Patience.  141 


Through  its  darkeft  hours  of  ill, 
He  is  waiting,  watching  ftill. 

Dofl  ihou  afk,   TFhen  comes  His  hour  ? 

Then,  when  it  (hall  aid  thee  beft. 
Truft   His   faith fulnefs  and  power, 

Truft  in   Him  and  quietly  reft. 
Suffer  on,  and   hope  and  wait  — 
Jesus  never  comes  too  late. 

Bleffed  day,  which  haftens  faft. 
End  of  conflict  and  of  fin  ! 

Death  itself  fhall  die  at  laft, 
Heaven's  eternal  joys  begin. 

Then  eternity  fhall  prove, 

God  is  Light,  and   God  -is  Love. 


Spitta. 


-<J*\SX(»»3- 


A   LITTLE   WHILE. 

A  LITTLE   while,  and  every  fear. 
That  o'er   the  perfe6l  day 
Flings  fhadows  dark  and  drear, 
Shall  pafs   like   mift  away  ; 
The  secret  tear,  the  anxious  figh. 

Shall  pafs  into  a  smile  ; 
Time  changes  to  eternity,  — 
We  only  wait  a  little   while. 


142 


Patience. 


A  little  while,  and  every  charm 
That  fteals  away  the  heart, 
And  earthly  joys  that  warm, 
And  lure  us  from  our  part. 

Shall  cease  our  heavenly  views  to  dim 
The  world  fhall  not  beguile 

Our  ever  faithful  thoughts  from  Him, 

Who  bade   us  wait  a  little  while. 

A  little  while,  and   all  around,  — 

The  earth,  and  sea,  and   (ky,  — 
The  sunny  light  and   sound 
Of  Nature's  minftrelsy, 

Shall  be  as  they  had  never  been  ; 
And  we,  so  weak  and  vile. 

Be  creatures  of  a  brighter   scene,  — 

We  only  wait  a  little  while. 


— »»9^e« 


TO-DAY   AND    TO-MORROW. 


nlle. 


HIGH   hopes  that  burned  like  flars  sublime, 
Go  down  the  heavens  of  Freedom  ; 
And  true  hearts  perifh  in  the  time 

We  bitterlieft  need  them  ! 
But  never  fit  we  down,  and   say 

There  's  nothing  left  but  sorrow  ; 
We  walk  the  wildernefs  to-day. 
The  promised  land  to-morrow. 


Patience. 


'43 


Our   birds  of  song  are   filent   now, 

There  are  no  flowers  blooming  ; 
Yet  life  beats  in  the  frozen  bough, 

And  Freedom's  spring  is  coming  ! 
And  Freedom's  tide  comes  up  alway 

Though   we   may   ftand  in  sorrow  j 
And  our  good   barque  aground  to-day, 

Shall  float   again   to-morrow. 

Through   all  the  long,  dark  nights  of  years. 

The  people's  cry  ascendeth. 
And  earth  is  wet  with  blood  and  tears  ; 

But  our   meek  sufferance   endeth  ! 
The   iQW  fhall  not  forever  sway, 

The  many  toil  in  sorrow  ; 
The  powers  of  earth  are  ftrong  to-day. 

But  heaven  fhall  rule  to-morrow. 

Though   hearts  brood  o'er  the  paft,  our  ejes 

With  smilino;  features  gliflen  ! 
For  lo  !   our  day  burfts  up  the  fkies  : 

Lean  out  your  souls   and  liften  ! 
The  world    rolls   Freedom's   radiant  way 

And  ripens  with   her   sorrow  j 
Keep  heart  !   who  bear  the  crofs  to-day, 

Shall  wear  the  crown  to-morrow. 


O   Youth  !   flame  earneft,  ftill  aspire, 

\\'ith   energies   immortal  ; 
To   many  a  heaven  of  defire, 

Our  yearning  opes  a  portal  : 


144  Patience. 

And  though  age  wearies  by  the  way, 
And  hearts  break  in  the  furrow, 

We  '11  sow  the  golden  grain  to-day. 
And  harveft  comes  to-morrow. 

Build  up  heroic   lives,  and   all 

Be  like  a  fheathen  sabre, 
Ready  to  flafh  out  at  God's  call, 

O  chivalry  of  labor  ! 
Triumph  and  toil  are  twins  ;   and  aye, 

Joy  suns   the  cloud   of  sorrow  ; 
And  't  is  the  martyrdom   to-day. 

Brings  viilory  to-morrow. 

Gerald  Majfey. 


MY    PSALM. 

I  MOURN  no  more  my  vaniflied  years 
Beneath  a  tender  rain, 
An  April  rain  of  smiles  and  tears. 
My  heart  is  young   again. 

The  weft  winds  blow,  and,  Tinging  low, 

I   hear  the  glad   ftreams  run  -, 
The  windows  of  my  soul   I  throw 

Wide  open  to  the  sun. 

No  longer  forward  nor  behind 
I  look  in  hope  and   fear  ; 


Patience.  145 

But,  grateful,  take   the  good   I   find, 
The  befl:  of  now  and  here. 

I   plough   no  more  a  desert  land, 

To   harvefl  weed   and   tare  ; 
The  manna  dropping  from   God's  hand. 

Rebukes  my  painful  care. 

I  break  my  pilgrim  ftafF,  I   lay 

Afide  the   toiling  oar  ; 
The  angel  sought  so  far  away 

I   welcome  at  my  door. 

The  airs  of  Spring  may  never  play 

Among  the  ripening  corn, 
Nor  frefhnefs  of  the   flowers  of  May, 

Blow  through  the  Autumn  morn  ; 

Yet  fhall  the  blue-eyed  gentian  look 

Through  fringed  lids  to  heaven, 
And  the  pale  after  in  the  brook, 

Shall  see  its  image  given  ; 

The  woods  fhall  wear  their  robes  of  praise, 

The  south  wind  softly  figh. 
And  sweet,  calm  days  in  golden  haze 

Melt  down  the  amber  fky. 

Not  lefs   fhall   manly  deed  and  word 
Rebuke  an  age  of  wrong  ; 


146 


Patience. 


The  graven   flowers  that  wreath  the  sword 
Make  not  the  blade  lefs  ftrong. 

But  smiting  hands   fhall  learn  to  heal, 

To  build  as  to  deftroy  ; 
Nor  lefs  my  heart  for  others  feel 

That  I   the   more  enjoy. 

All  as  God  wills,  who  wisely  heeds 

To  give   or  to  withhold, 
And  knoweth   more  of  all   my  needs 

Than  all   my  prayers  have  told  ! 

Enough   that  bleffings   undeserved 
Have  marked   my  erring  track  — 

That  whereso'er  my  feet  have  swerved. 
His  chaftenino;  turned   me  back  — 


That  more  and   more   a  Providence 

Of  love  is  underftood. 
Making  the  springs  of  time  and   sense 

Sweet  with  eternal  good  — 

That  death  seems  but  a  covered  way 

Which  opens  into  light, 
Wherein   no  blinded  child  can   ftray 

Beyond  the  Father's  fight  — 

That  care  and  trial  seem  at  Lift, 
Through   Memory's  sunset  air. 


Patience. 

Like  mountain  ranges  overpaft, 
In  purple  diftance  fair  — 

That  all  the  jarring  notes  of  life 
Seem  blending  in  a  psalm, 

And  all  the  angles   of  its  ftrife 
Slow  rounding  into  calm. 


H7 


And  so  the  fhadows  fall  apart, 

And  so  the  weft  winds  play  ; 
And  all  the  windows  of  my  heart 

I  open  to  the  day. 

J.  G.  JVhittier. 


ENDURANCE. 

A  STRONG  and  mailed  angel. 
With  eyes  serene  and  deep 
Unwearied  and  unwearying, 
His  patient  watch  doth  keep. 

A  ftrong  and  mailed  angel 

In   the  midnight  and   the  day  ; 

Walking  with  me  at  my  labor. 
Kneeling  by   me  when   I  pray. 

What  he  says  no  other  heareth  ; 
None  liften  save  the  ftars. 


148  Patience. 

That  move  in  armed  battalions, 
Clad  with  the  ftrength  of  Mars. 

Low  are  the  words  he  speaketh  — 
''  Young  dreamer,  God  is   great  ! 

'T  is  glorious  to  suffer  ! 
'T  is  majefly  to  wait !  " 

O,  Angel  of  Endurance  ! 

O,  saintly  and  sublime  ! 
White  are  the  armed  legions 

That  tread  the  halls  of  Time ! 


Blefled,  and   brave,  and  holy! 

The  olive  on  my  heart, 
Baptized  with  thy  baptizing. 

Shall  never  more  depart. 

O,  flrong  and  mailed  angel ! 

Thy  trailing  robes  I   see  ! 
Read  other  souls  the  lefTon 

So  meekly  read  to  me  ! 

Still  chant  the  same  grand  anthem 
The  beautiful  and  great  — 

*'  'T  is  glorious  to  suffer, 
'Tis  majefly  to  wait!" 


L.  H.  F. 


Patience. 


149 


TIMES   GO   BY   TURNS. 

THE   lopped  tree  in  time  may  grow  again  ; 
Moft  naked  plants  renew  both  fruit  and  flowers  ; 
The  sorrieft  wight  may  find  release  from  pain  ; 
The  drieft  soil  suck  in  some  moiftening  fhowers  ; 
Times  go  by  turns,  and  chances  change  by  course 
From  foul  to  fair  —  from  better  hap  to  worse. 

The  sea  of  fortune  doth  not  ever  flow, 

She  draws  her  favors  to  the  loweft  ebb. 

Her  tides  have  equal  times  to  come  and  go. 

Her  loom   doth  weave  the   fine  and  coarsefl:  web  ; 

No  joy  so  great,  but  runneth  to  an  end  ; 

No  hap  so  hard  but   may  in   fine  amend. 

Not  always  fall  of  leaf,  nor  ever  spring  ; 
No   endlefs   night,   nor  yet   eternal  day  ; 
The  saddeft  bird  a  season  finds  to  fing. 
The  rougheft  ftorm  a  calm  may  soon  allay  : 
Thus,  with  succeeding  turns,  God   tempereth  all, 
That  man  may  hope  to  rise,  yet  fear  to  fall. 


A  chance  may   win  what  by  mischance  was   loft ; 
That  net  that  holds  no  great,  takes  little  fifh  ; 


1 50  Patience. 

In  some  things  all,  in  all  things  none  are  crofT'd  j 
Few  all   they  need,  but  none  have  all  they  wifh  ; 
Unmingled  joys   here  to  no  man  befall  ; 
Who  leaft,  hath  some ;  who  moft,  hath  never  all. 

Robert  Southwell.      1 562-1 594. 


— i-5^a<-- 


PRESUMPTION    AND    DESPAIR. 

ONE  time  I   was  allowed  to  fleer, 
Through  realms  of  azure  light ; 
Henceforth,  I  said,  I  need  not  fear 

A  lower,  meaner  flight  ; 
But  here  fhall  evermore  abide, 
In  light  and  splendor  glorified. 

My  heart  one  time  the  rivers  fed, 

Large  dews  upon  it  lay  ; 
A  freflinefs  it  has  won,  I  said, 

Which  fhall  not  pafs  away ; 
But  what  it  is,  it  fhall  remain. 
Its  frefhnefs  to  the  end  retain. 

But  when  I  lay  upon  the  fhore, 
Like  some  poor,  wounded  thing, 

I  deemed  I  fliould  not  evermore 
Refit  my  fhattered  wing ; 


Patience. 

Nailed  to   the  ground,  and   fafteiied   there, 
This  was  the  thought  of  my  despair. 

And  when  my  very  heart  seemed  dried. 
And  parched  as  summer  dull, 

Such  ftill  I  deemed  it   muft  abide, 
No  hope   had   I,  no  truft 

That  any  power  again  could  blefs 

With  fountains  that  waste  wildernefs. 

But  if  both  hope  and  fear  were   vain. 

And  came  alike  to  naught. 
Two  leffons  we  from  this  may  gain, 

If  ought  can  teach   us  aught; — 
One  lefl'on  rather,  to  divide 

Between  our  fearfulnefs  and  pride. 


'5> 


Trench. 


-~«.^=«Cft>^N»-~ 


LET  them  that  would  build  caftles  in  the  air. 
Vault  thither,  without  ftep  or  flair, 
Inftead  of  feet  to  climb,  take  wings  to  fly. 

And  think  their  turrets  top  the  fky. 
But  let   me   lay  all   my   foundations   deep. 

And  learn  before  I  run,  to  creep. 
Who  digs  through   rocks   to   lay  his   ground-works    low, 
May  in  good  time  build  high,   and  sure,  though   flow. 

Chrijiopher  Harvey. 


152  Prayer. 


PRAYER. 


PRAYER. 

PRAYER  —  the  church's  banquet;  angel's   age; 
God's  breath  in  man  returning  to   his  birth  ; 
The  soul  in  paraphrase  ;   heart  in  pilgrimage  ; 

The  Chriftian  plummet,  sounding  heaven  and   earth  ; 

Engine  againft  th'   Almighty  ;  Tinner's  tower  ; 

Reversed  thunder  ;   Chrift's-fide-piercing  spear  ; 
The  fix-days  world  transpofing  in  an  hour ; 

A  kind  of  tune,  which  all  things  hear  and   fear  ; 

Softnefs,  and  peace,  and  joy,  and  love,  and  blifs  ; 

Exalted  manna  ;  gladnefs  of  the  beft  ; 

Heaven  in  ordinary  ;   man  well  dreft  ; 
The   milky-way  ;  the  bird  of  paradise  ; 
Church  bells  beyond  the  ftars  heard  ;  the  soul's  blood  ; 
The  land  of  spices  ;  something  underftood. 

George  Herbert. 


Prayer. 


153 


OJOYES  !   infinite  sweetnefs !  with  what  flowrcs 
And   (hoots  of  glory   my  soul  breakes  and  buds  ! 

All  the  long  houres 

Of  night  and  reft, 

Through  the  ftill  fhrouds 

Of  fleep  and  clouds, 
This  dew  fell  on   my  breaft  ; 

O   how  it  blouds. 
And  spirits  all  my  earth  !   hearic  !  in  what  rings 
And   hymming  circulations   the   quick  world 

Awakes  and   fings  ! 

The  rifing  winds 

And   falling  springs, 

Birds,   beafts,  all  things 
Adore  Him   in  their  kinds. 

Thus  all  is  hurl'd 
In  sacred  hymnes  and  order,  the  great  chime 
And  symphony  of  nature.      Prayer  is 

The  world  in  tune, 

A  spirit-voyce. 

And  vocall  joyes, 
Whose  eccho  is  heaven's  blifTe. 

O  let  me  climbe 
When  I   lye  down !     The  pious  soul  by  night 
Is  like  a  clouded  ftarre,  whose  beames,  though  said 

To  fhed   their  light 

Under  some  cloud. 


154  Prayer. 

Yet  are  above, 
And  fhine  and  move 
Beyond  that  miftie  ftirowd. 
So  in  my  bed, 
That  curtain'd  grave,  though  fleep,  like  aflies,  hide 
My  lamp  and  life,  both  fhall  in  Thee  abide. 

Henry  Vaughan. 


A  GARDEN  so  well  watered  before  morn 
Is  hotly  up,  that  not  the  swart  sun's  blaze, 
Down-beating  with   unmitigated   rays. 
Nor  arid  winds  from   scorching  places  borne. 
Shall  quite  prevail  to  make  it  bare  and  fhorn 
Of  its  green  beauty  —  fhall  not  quite  prevail 
That  all  its  morning  frefhnefs  fhall  exhale, 
Till  evening  and  the  evening  dews  return  — 
A  bleffing  such  as  this  our  hearts  might  reap. 
The  frefhnefs  of  the  garden  they   might  fhare, 
Through  the  long  day  a  heavenly  frefhnefs   keep, 
If,  knowing  how  the  day  and  the  day's  glare 
Muft  beat  upon  them,  we  would  largely  fleep. 
And  water  them  betimes  with  dews  of  prayer. 

Trench. 


Praye 


155 


ENSAMPLES   OF   OUR   SAVIOUR. 

OUR  Saviour,   (pattern  of  true  holinefs,) 
Continual  pray'd,  us  by  ensample  teaching, 
When   he  was  baptized  in  the  vvildernefs, 

In  working  miracles  and  in  his  preaching, 
Upon  the  mount,  in  garden  groves  of  death, 
At  his  laft  supper,  at  his  parting  breath. 

Nothing  more  grateful  in  the  higheft  eyes. 
Nothing  more   firm  in  danger  to  protect  us, 

Nothing  more  forcible  to  pierce  the  fkies, 
And  not  depart  till  mercy  do  respe61:  us  : 

And,  as  the  soul  life  to  the  body  gives, 

So  prayer  revives  the  soul,  by  prayer  it  lives. 

Robert   Southwell. 


CALL    TO    PRAYER, 


COME   to  the  morning  prayer. 
Come,  let  us  kneel   and   pray;  — 
Prayer  is  the  Chriftian   pilgrim's   flaff", 
To  walk  with   God   all   day. 


156  Prayer. 

At  noon,  beneath  the  Rock 
Of  Ages,  reft  and  pray  ; 
Sweet  is  that  fhelter  from  the  heat. 
When  the  sun  smites  by  day. 

At  evening,  fhut  thy  door. 
Round  the  home  altar  pray ; 
And,  finding  there  the  house  of  God, 
At  Heaven's  gate  close  the  day. 

When  midnight  veils  our  eyes. 
Oh,  it  is  sweet  to  say, 
I   fleep,   but  my  heart  waketh.  Lord, 
With  thee  to  watch  and  pray  ! 


THERE  is   an  eye  that  never  fleeps. 
Beneath  the  wing  of  night ; 
There  is  an  ear  that  never  shuts. 
When  fink  the  beams  of  light. 

There   is  an  arm  that  never  tires, 
When  human   ftrength  gives  way  ; 

There  is  a  love  that  never  fails. 
When  earthly  loves  decay. 

That  eye  is  fixed  on  seraph  throngs  ; 
That  ear  is  filled   with  angels'   songs  ; 


Prayer. 

That  arm   upholds  the  world  on   high  ; 
That  love  is  thrown  beyond  the  fky. 

But  there  's  a  power  which  man  can  wield 

When   mortal   aid   is   vain  ;  — 
That  eye,  that  arm,  that  love  to  reach, 

That  liftening  ear  to  gain. 

That  power  is  prayer,  which  soars  on  high, 
And  feeds   on  blifs  beyond  the  sicy  ! 


»57 


ALONE   WITH    GOD. 


ALONE  with   God!  day's  craven  cares 
Have  crowded  onward  unawares  ; 
The  soul  is  left  to  breathe  her  prayers. 

Alone  with  God  !  I  bare  my  breaft. 
Come  in,  come  in,  O   holy  gueft. 
Give  reft  —  thy  reft,  of  reft  the  beft. 

Alone  with   God  !  how  ftill  a  calm 
Steals  o'er  me,  sweet  as  music's  balm, 
When  seraphs   sing  a  seraph's  psalm. 

Alone  with   God  !   no  human   eye 
Is  here  with   eager  look  to  pry 
Into  the  meanino;  of  each  figh. 


158 

Prayer. 

Alone 

with 

God 

no  jealous  glare 

Now 

flings 

me  with  its  torturing  stare  ; 

No  h 

iman 

malice  says  —  beware  ! 

Alone 

with 

God 

from  earth's  rude  crowd, 

With 

joflling  fteps  and  laughter  loud, 

My  b 

jtter 

sOul    I 

need   not  fhroud. 

Alone 

with 

God 

He  only  knows 

If  sorrow's 

ocean 

overflows 

The  filent 

spring 

from  whence  it  rose. 

Alone 

with 

God. 

He  mercy  lends, 

Life's 

fainting  hope,  life's  meagre  ends, 

Life's 

dwar 

ing  pain  he  comprehends. 

Alone 

with 

God! 

He  feeleth  well 

The  soul's 

pent 

ife  that  will  o'erwell  ; 

The  life-long  want  no  words   may   tell ! 

Alone 

with 

God! 

ftill   nearer  bend  ; 

O   tender  Father 

condescend 

In  this  my 

need 

to  be  my   friend. 

Alone 

with 

God! 

with  suppliant  mien 

Upon 

thy  [ 

)itying 

breaft  I  lean. 

Nor  lefs  because 

thou  art  unseen  ! 

Alone 

with 

God 

safe  in  thine  arms, 

O   (hield  me  from  life's  wild  alarms, 

O  save  me 

from 

life's   fearful  harms. 

Prayer. 

Alone  with   God  !   my  Father,  blefs, 

With  thy  celeftial  promises, 

The  soul  that  needs  thy  tendernefs. 

Alone  with  God  !   O   sweet  to  me 
This  covert  to  whose  fhade   I  flee. 
To  breathe  repose  in  thee  —  in  thee  ! 

PRAYER   FOR    A    NEW   HEART. 

OFOR  a  heart  to  praise  my  God, 
A  heart  from  guilt  set   free  ; 
A  heart  that's  sprinkled  with  the  blood, 
So  freely  ftied  for  me ! 

A  heart  refigned,  submiffive,  meek, 
My  blefTed  Saviour's  throne,  — 

Where  only  Chrift  is  heard   to  speak. 
Where  Jesus  reigns  alone  : 

A   humble,  lowly,   contrite  heart. 

Believing,   true,  and   clean  ; 
Which  neither  life  nor  death   can  part 

From   Him  that  dwells  within  : 


159 


A  heart  in  every  thought  renewed. 
And  full  of  love  divine  : 


1 60  Prayer. 

Perfect  and   right,   and  pure  and  good;- 
A  copy,  Lord,  of  thine! 

Thy  nature,  gracious  Lord,  impart. 
Come  quickly  from   above  ; 

Write  thy   new  name  upon  my  heart, 
Thy  new,  beft  name  of  Love ! 


Wepy. 


— *3«e#<®4^2^r^ 


THE    PRAYER    OF    THOMAS   ELLWOOD. 


OH  !  that  mine  eye  might  closed  be 
To   what  concerns  me  not  to  see  : 
That  deafnefs   might  poflefs  my  ear 
To  what  concerns  me  not  to  hear  : 
That  Truth   my  tongue  might  ever  tie 
From  speaking  words   of  vanity  : 
That  no  vain  thought  might  ever  reft 
Or  be  conceived  within   my  breaft  ; 
So  that  in  deed  and  word  and  thought. 
Glory  may  unto   God  be  wrought. 
But  what  are  wifhes  ?     Lord  mine   eye 
Js  fixed  on  Thee,  to  Thee  I  cry  ! 
Cleanse  Lord,  and   purify  my  heart 
And  make  it  clean   in  every  part  ; 
And  when  't  is  pure.  Lord   keep  it  so. 
For  that  is  more  than  I  can  do. 

1639-1713. 


Prayer. 


l6l 


SONG    OF    A    FAMILY. 

OMAKE  our  house  Thy  sanduary  ! 
Come  in  to  us,  a  friendly  guefl, 
And  in  our  circle  ever  tarry  ; 

Then  (hall  we  be  forever  bleft, 
And  Thou,  a  house-mate,  fhall  these  walls 
Transfigure  into  royal  halls. 

Joy  dwells,  O  Lord,  where'er  thou  ftayeft  ; 

There  blooms   a  heavenly  blefTednefs  j 
In    filk  thy   poorell  thou   arrayeft, 

Though  men  see  but  a  ragg^ed  drefs. 
The  pureft  high  delight  is  there, 
And  even  in  want  is  wealth,  to  spare. 

Thou   every  morning   us   awakefl:, 
And  graciously   to  prayer  doft  call  ; 

The   household   cares   Thou   undertakeft ; 
Thou  knoweft  what  is  beft  in  all. 

And  care,   though  't  were  a  leaden  load, 
Is  but  a  feather's   weight  with   God. 


One  tender  bond   all  hearts  embraces, 

A   heavenly  bond,   Thy  hand   hath   wove 
The  rooms  are  turned   to  temple-spaces, 
1 1 


1 62  Prayer. 

Illumined  with  God's  peace  and  love. 
Grace  is  the  sunfhine  of  our  home, 
And  there  God's  angels  go  and  come. 

Tranjlated  from  the  German  by  Rev.  C.  T.  Brooks. 


♦©®«* 


ACTS  2:  2. 

SPIRIT  Divine  !  attend  our  prayer, 
And  make  this  house  thy  home  ; 
Descend  with  all  thy  gracious  power, 
Oh !   come,  Great  Spirit,  come  ! 

Come  as  the  light ;  to  us  reveal 

Our  emptinefs  and  woe  ; 
And  lead  us  in  those  paths  of  life 

Where  all  the  righteous  go. 

Come  as  the  fire,  and  purge  our  hearts 

Like  sacrificial  flame  ; 
Let  our  whole  souls  an  offering  be 

To  our  Redeemer's  name. 

Come  as  the  dew,  and  sweetly  blefs 

This  consecrated  hour ; 
May  barren  minds  be  taught  to  own 

Thy  fertilizing  power. 


Prayer. 


163 


Come  as  the  dove,  and  spread  thy  wings, 

The  wings  of  peaceful   love  ; 
And  let  the  Church  on  earth  become 

Bleft  as  the  Church  above. 


ABIDE   WITH    ME. 


ing  an 


:d  him,  saying,  Abide  with  us;  for  it  is  toward  even- 
nd  the  da\'  is  far  snent."      Luke  24:    29. 


'They  conftraine^  ...»w,  ^^^w.^,  ^.^.v.^ 
nd  the  day  is  far  spent. 


ABIDE  with  me.     Faft  falls  the  eventide  ; 
The  darknefs  thickens  :  Lord  !   with  me  abide 
When  other  helpers  fail,  and  comforts  flee, 
Help  of  the  helpless,  O  abide  with  me! 

Swift  to  its  close  ebbs  out  life's   little  day  j 
Earth's  joys  grow  dim,  its  glories  pafs  away; 
Change  and   decay  in  all  around   I   see  ; 
O  Thou  who  changed:  not,  abide  with  me. 

Not  a  brief  glance  I  beg,  a  paffing  word. 
But  as  thou  dwell'st  with   thy  disciples.  Lord  — 
Familiar,  condescending,  patient,  free, 
Come  not  to  sojourn,   but  abide  with   me. 


Come  not  in  terrors,  as  the  King  of  kings. 
But  kind  and  good,  with   healing  in  thy  wings  ; 


1 64  Prayer. 

Tears  for  all  woes,  a  heart  for  every  plea; 
Come,  Friend  of  finners,  thus  abide  with  me! 

Thou  on  my  head  in  early  youth  didft  smile. 
And,  though  rebellious  and  perverse  meanwhile, 
Thou  haft  not  left  me,  oft  as  I  left  >Jiee  ;  J* 
On  to  the  close,   O  Lord!  abide  with   me. 

I  need  thy  presence  every  pafling  hour,  — 
What  but  thy  grace  can  foil  the  tempter's  power  r 
Who  like  Thyself  my  guide  and  ftay  can  be  ? 
Through  cloud  and  sunftiine,   O  abide  with  me  ! 

I   fear  no  foe,  with  Thee  at  hand  to  blefs  : 
Ills  have  no  weight,  and  tears  no  bitterness. 
Where  is  death's   fting  ?   where,  grave,  thy  vi6lory  ? 
I  triumph  ftill,  if  Thou  abide  with   me  ! 

Hold  thou  Thy  crofs  before   my  clofmg  eyes. 

Shine  through  the  gloom,  and  point  me  to  the  fkies  : 

Heaven's    morning    breaks,    and    earth's    vain    shadows 

flee  ; 
In  life,  in  death,   O   Lord  !   abide  with   me. 

Lyte. 


Prayer. 


165 


GRACE. 

MY   ftock  lies  dead  ;  and  no  increase 
Doth   my  dull   hufbandry   improve  : 
O   let  Thy  graces,  without  cease, 

Drop  from  above. 

If  ftill  the  sun  jfihould  hide  his  face, 

Thy   house  would  but  a  dungeon  prove  ; 
Thy  works,  Night's  captives.      O  let  grace 
Drop  from  above. 

The  dew  doth  every  morning  fall : 

And  fhall  the  dew  outflrip  thy   Dove  ? 
The  dew  for  which  grass  cannot  call 
Drop  from  above  ! 

Death   is  ftill  working  like  a  mole. 

And  digs  my  grave  at  each  remove. 
Let  grace  work  too    and  on  my  soul 
Drop   from  above. 


Sin   is   flill   hammering  my   heart 
Unto  a  hardnefs  void  of  love. 
Let  suppling  grace,  to  crofs  his  art, 

Drop  from  above. 


1 66  Prayer. 

O  come  ;   for  Thou  doft  know  the  way  ! 

Or,  if  to  me  thou  wilt  not  move, 
Remove   me,  where  I  need  not  say, 

'*  Drop  from  above  !  " 

George  Herbert. 


THE   LORD'S    PRAYER   ILLUSTRATED. 


o 


UR  Father  — 

By  right  of  creation, 
By  bountiful  provifion. 
By  gracious  adoption  j 


Who  art  in   Heaven  — 

The  throne  of  thy  glory. 
The  portion  of  thy  children. 
The  temple  of  thy  angels  ; 

Hallowed  be  thy  name  — 

By  the  thoughts  of  our  hearts. 
By  the  words  of  our  lips. 
By  the  works  of  our  hands  j 


Thy  kingdom  come  — 

Of  Providence  to  defend  us, 
Of  grace  to  refine  us, 
Of  glory  to  crown   us  ; 


Prayer.  ibj 

Thy  will  be  done  on  earth  as  it  is  in   Heaven  — 
Toward  us  without  refiftance, 
By  us  without  compulfion, 
Universally  without  exception, 
Eternally  without  declenfion  ; 

Give  us  this  day  our  daily  bread  — 

Of  neceflity  for  our  bodies, 
Of  eternal  life  for  our  souls  ; 

And  forgive  us  our  trespafles  — 

Againft  the  commands  of  thy  law, 
Againft  the   grace  of  thy  gospel  j 

As  we  forgive  them  that  trespafs  againft  us  — 
By  defaming  our  characters, 
By  embezzling  our  property, 
By  abufmg  our  persons  ; 

And  lead  us  not  into   temptation,  but    deliver   us   from 
evil  — 

Of  overwhelming  afflictions. 
Of  worldly  enticements. 
Of  Satan's  devices, 
Of  errors'  seductions, 
Of  fmful  affeClions ; 


For    thine    is    the    kingdom,  the  power,  and    the   glory 
forever  — 

Thy  kingdom  governs  all. 


1 68 


rayer. 


Amen. 


Thy  power  subdues  all, 
Thy  glory  is   above  all. 

As  it  is   in  thy  purposes, 
So  it  is  in  thy  promises, 
So  be  it  in  our  prayers, 
So  it  fhall  be  to  thy  praise. 

Pierre  Bernard. 


THE    SHEPHERD'S    SABBATH    SONG. 


THIS  is  the  Sabbath  day! 
In   the  wide   field   I   am   alone. 
Hark  !    now  one  morning-bell's  sweet  tone  : 
Now   it   has   died   away. 

Kneeling   I   worfhip   Thee; 
Sweet  dread  doth  o'er  my  spirit  Ileal 
From  whispering  sounds  of  those  who  kneel 

Unseen  to  pray   with  me. 

Around  and   far  away 
So  clear  and   solemn  is  the  fky. 
It  seems  all  opening  to  my  eye  ; 

This  is  the  Sabbath  day  ! 

From  the  German  of  XJhland^  by  Mrs.  Fallen. 


Prayer. 


169 


"JAM    LUCIS    ORTO   SIDERE." 


NOW   that  the  sun   is   gleaming   bright 
Implore  we,  bending  low, 
That  Thou,  the   Uncreated  Light 
Wouldft   guide   us  as   we  go. 

II. 

Nor  finful  word,  nor  deed  of  wrong. 
Nor  thoughts  that  idly  rove, 
But  fimple  truth   be  on  our  tongue 
And   in   our   hearts   be  love. 

III. 

And  as  the  hours  in  order  flow  — 
O   Chrift  !   securely  fence 
Our  gates,  beleaguered   by  the  foe, 
The  gate  of  every  sense. 


IV. 


And  grant,  that  to  thine  honor.   Lord  ! 
Our  daily   toil   may  tend. 
That  we  begin   it  at  thy  word, 
And   in   thy   favor  end. 


170 


Prayer. 


MORNING    PRAYER. 

O   SILENCE  deep  and  ftrange  ! 
The  earth  doth  yet  in  quiet  flumber  lie, 
No  ftir  of  life,  save  on  yon  woodland  range, 
The  tall  trees  bow  as  if  their  Lord  pafled  by. 

Like  to  one  new-create, 
I  have  no  memory  of  grief  and   care  ; 
Of  all  the  things   which  vexed   my  soul  of  late 
I  am  afhamed  in  this  calm   morning  air. 

This  world,  with  all  its  band 
Of  clamorous  joys  and  griefs,  fhall  be  to  me 
A  bridge  whereon,  my  pilgrim-ftaff  in  hand, 
I  crofs  the  ftream  of  Time,  O  Lord,  to  thee. 

From  the  German  of  J.  F.  Eichendorf. 


Prayer. 


171 


HYMN    OF   TRUST. 

OLOVE  Divine,  that  ftooped  to  fliare 
Our  fharpefl:  pang,  our  bittereft  tear, 
On  Thee  we  caft  each  earthborn  care. 
We  smile  at  pain  while  Thou  art  near  ! 

Though  long  the  weary  way  we  tread. 
And  sorrow  crown  each  lingering  year, 

No  path  we  fhun,  no  darknefs  dread, 

Our  hearts  ftill  whispering.  Thou  art  near  ! 

When  drooping  pleasure  turns  to  grief. 
And  trembling  faith  is  changed  to  fear, 

The  murmuring  wind,  the  quivering  leaf, 
Shall  softly  tell   us.  Thou  art  near  ! 


On  Thee  we  fling  our  burdening  woe, 
O  Love   Divine,   forever  dear. 

Content  to  suffer,  while  we  know, 
Living  and  dying,   Thou  art  near  ! 


Dr.  0.  W.  Holmes. 


172  Prayer, 


MORNING   HYMN. 

AWAKE,   iny  soul!  awake,  mine  eyes  I 
Awake,   my  drowsy   faculties  ! 

Awake,  and  see  the  new-born  light 

Spring  from  the  darksome  womb  of  night  I 

Look  up  and  see  the  unwearied  sun, 

Already  has  his  race  begun. 

The  pretty  lark  is  mounted  high. 

And  ftngs  her  matins  in  the   fky. 

Arise,  my   soul !  and  thou,   my  voice. 

In  songs  of  praise  early   rejoice ! 

O   great  Creator  !   heavenly  King  ! 

Thy  praises   ever  let   me   ling ! 

Thy  power  has   made,  thy   goodnefs  kept. 

This   fencelefs   body   while   I   flept  ; 

Yet  one  day  more  has  given  me 

From  all  the  powers  of  darknefs  free. 

Oh  !   keep  my  heart  from   fin  secure, 

My   life   unblameable  and   pure  \ 
That  when  the  laft  of  all  my  days  is  come. 
Cheerful  and  fearlefs  I   may  wait  my  doom. 

Thomas  Flatman.      1633-1688. 


Prayer.  173 


EVENING   HYMN. 

SLEEP!  drowsy  Sleep!  come  close   mine  eyes, 
Tired   with  beholding  vanities  : 
Sweet  flumbers,  come,  and  chase  away 
The  toils  and  follies  of  the  day. 
On  your  soft  bosom  will  I  lie, 
Forget  the  world,  and  learn  to  die. 
O   Israel's   watchful  Shepherd!  spread 
Tents  of  angels  round  my  bed  \ 
Let  not  the  spirits  of  the  air 
While  I  flumber  me  ensnare  ; 
But  save   thy   suppliant   free   from   harms, 
Ci.isped  in   thine  everlafting  arms. 
Clouds   and   thick  darknefs  are  thy  throne, 
Thy   wonderful   pavilion  ; 
Oh  !  dart  from  thence  a  fhining  ray, 
And  then   my  midnight  fhall  be  day! 
Thus  when  the   morn  in  crimson  'drefTed, 
Breaks  through  the  windows  of  the  East, 
My  hymns  of  thankful  praise  fhall  rise 
Like  incense  at  the  morning  sacrifice  ! 

Thojnas  Flatftian. 


1 74  Prayer. 


EVENING  HYMN. 

QUIETLY  reft  the  woods  and  dales, 
Silence  round  the  hearth  prevails, 
The  world  is  all  afleep  : 
Thou,   my  soul,  in  thought  arise. 
Seek  thy  Father  in  the  fkies. 
And  holy  vigils  with   Him  keep. 

Sun,  where  hideft  thou  thy  light  ? 
Art  thou  driven  hence  by  Night, 

Thy  dark  and  ancient  foe  ? 
Go!  another  Sun  is  mine  — 
Jesus  comes  with  light  divine. 
To  cheer  my  pilgrimage  below. 

Now  that  day  has  pafTed  away, 
Golden  ftars  in  bright  array 
Bespangle  the  blue  (ky  : 
Bright  and  clear,  so  would   I   ftand. 
When   I   hear  my  Lord's  command 
To  leave   this  earth,  and   upward   fly. 

Now  this  body  seeks   for  reft. 
From  its  veftments  all  undreft. 

Types  of  mortality  : 
Chrift  ftiall  give  me  soon  to  wear. 


Prayer. 

Garments  beautiful  and   fair  — 
White  robes  of  glorious  majefty. 

Head,  and  feet,  and  hands,  once  more 
Joy  to  think  of  labor  o'er. 

And  night  with   gladnefs  see. 
O   my  heart !  thou  too  (halt  know- 
Reft  from  all  thy  toil  below, 
And  from  earth's  turmoil  soon  be  free. 

Weary  limbs,  now  reft  ye  here  ; 
Safe  from  danger  and   from  fear, 
Seek  flumber  on  this  bed  : 
Deeper  reft  ere  long  to   fhare, 
Other  hands  fliall  soon  prepare 
My  narrow  couch  among  the  dead. 

While  my  eyes  I  gently  close, 
Stealing  o'er  me  soft  repose. 

Who  ftiall   my  guardian  be  ? 
Soul  and  body  now  I  leave, 
(And   Thou  wilt  the  truft  receive,) 
O  Israel's  Watchman  !  unto  Thee. 


175 


O   my  friends  !  from  you  this  day 
May  all    ill    have    fled   away. 

No  danger  near  have  come. 
Now,  O   my  God,  these  dear  ones  keep  ; 
Give   to   my  beloved   fleep. 
And  ansiels  send  to  guard  their  home  ! 

Paul  Gerhardt. 


rayer. 


EVENING. 


ANOTHER  day  is  numbered  with  the  pafl, 
Another  night  is  given  us  for  reft, 
Father,   my   spirit  at  thy   feet   I   caft, 
O  !   gather  it   unto  thy  loving  breaft. 


Look  on   its  failures,  efforts,  and  miftalces. 
Look  on  its  inward  ftubborn  roots  of  fin. 

See   how   the   law   that   it   accepts,   it  breaks, 
Lord!  to  thy  secret  presence  take  it  in! 

Nightly,  Thou  sendeft  reft  to  all  the  earth, 
Sendeft  a  time  for  filence  and  returning, 

O,  Father!  teach  me  all  the  holy  worth 

Of  the  ftill  hours  when  thy  clear  ftars   are  burning. 

Thou  giveft  me  reft   that  with  the  day's  beginning 
I  may   rise  ftrong  and   fresh  for  the  new  day. 

So,  purged  and   refted   from  its  frequent  sinning. 
May  my  soul  rise  prepared  for  its   ftrait  way. 

Blefs  those  that  love  me,  those  that  love  me  not, 
Strengthen  the   feeble  and  uplift  the  grieving. 

Send  to  thy  children,  in  whatever  lot. 

Riches,  and  peace,  and  ftrength  in  true  believing. 


Prayer.  177 

So  to  thy  arms  my  body  I  commit, 
My  weary  body  to  thine  arms  outspread  : 

Prepare  me  to  accomplish  what  is  fit, 

And   peace  and  purenefs  watch  befide  my  bed. 


.^%%%^~ 


UNTO   the  glory  of  thy   Holy   Name, 
Eternal  God  !  whom  I  both  love  and  fear. 
Here  bear  I  witness  that  I  never  came 
Before  thy  throne  and   found  thee  loth  to  hear, 
But,  ever  ready  with  an   open  ear. 
And  though  sometimes  thou   seems't  thy   face  to  hide 
As  one  that  hath  his  love   withdrawn  from  me, 
'T  is   that   my  faith   may  to  the  full  be  tried. 
And  I  thereby  may  only  better  see 
How  weak  I  am  when  not  upheld  by  Thee. 

Thomas  Ellwood.      1669. 

IMMANUEL. 

HOW  good  a  God  have  we  !   who  for  our  sake, 
To  save  us   from   the  burning  lake. 
Did  change  the  order  of  creation  : 
At  firft   He  made 


178 


Prayer. 


Man  like   Himself  in   his  own  image  ;  now 

In  the  more  blcfl'ed  reparation, 

The  heavens  bow, 

Eternity  took  the   measure  of  a  span  ; 

And  said, 
**  Let  us  make  ourselves  like  man  ; 
And  not  from  man  the  woman  take, 
But   from  the  woman,  man." 
Hallelujah,   we  adore 

His  name,  whose  goodnefs  hath  no  ftore. 

yeremy  Taylor. 


1667. 


Chriji.  1 79 


CHRIST, 


CHRISTMAS    HYMN. 

CALM  on  the  liftening  ear  of  night 
Come   Heaven's  melodious  drains, 
Where  wild   Judea  ftretches  far 
Her  silver-mantled  plains  ! 

Celeflial  choirs,  from  courts  above, 

Shed  sacred  glories  there  ; 
And   angels,  with   their  sparkling  lyres. 

Make  mufic  on  the  air. 

The  answering  hills  of  Paleftine 

Send  back  the  glad  reply  ; 
And  greet,  from  all  their  holy  heights, 

The  dayspring  from  on  high. 

On   the  blue  depths  of  Galilee 
There  comes   a  holier  calm. 

And  Sharon  waves,   in  solemn  praise. 
Her  filent  groves  of  palm. 


i8o  Chri/L 

"  Glory  to  God  !  "  the  sounding   fkies 
Loud  with  their  anthems  ring  ;  — 

Peace  to  the  earth,  —  good-will  to  men, 
From   heaven's   Eternal  King  ! 

Light  on  thy  hills,  Jerusalem  ! 

The   Saviour  now  is  born  ! 
And  bright  on   Bethlehem's  joyous  plains 

Breaks  the   firfl  Chriftmas   morn. 

Rev.  E.  H.  Sears. 


A    HYMN    OF   THE    NATIVITY,   SUNG   BY   THE 
SHEPHERDS. 

GLOOMY  night  embraced  the  place 
Where  the  noble  infant  lay: 
The  babe  look'd  up,  and  show'd  His   face  ; 

In  spite  of  darknefs  it  was  day. 
It  was  Thy  day,  sweet,  and  did  rise. 
Not  from  the   Eaft,  but  from  thy  eyes. 

We  saw  thee  in  thy  balmy  neft, 
Young  dawn  of  our  eternal  day  ; 

We  saw  thine  eyes  break  from  the  Eaft, 
And  chase  the  trembling  fhades  away  : 

We  saw  thee,  and  we  bleft  the  night. 

We  saw  thee  by  thine  own  sweet  light. 


Chrijl.  i8i 

Poor  world,  said   I,  what  wilt  thou  do 

To  entertain  this  ftarry  ftranger? 
Is  this  the  heft  thou  canft  beftow  — 

A  cold  and  not  too  cleanly  manger  ? 
Contend,  the  powers  of  heaven  and  earth. 
To  fit  a  bed   for  this  huge  birth. 

Proud  world,  said  I,  cease  your  control. 

And  let  the  mighty  babe  alone. 
The  phoenix  builds  the  phoenix's  neft, 

Love's  architecture  is  his  own. 
The  babe,  whose  birth  embraves  this  morn. 
Made   his  own  bed  ere  he  was  born. 

Welcome  all  wonders  in  one  fight ! 

Eternity  fhut  in  a  span  ! 
Summer  in  winter,  day  in  night! 

Heaven  in  earth,  and  God  in   man  ! 
Great  little  one,  whose  all-embracing  birth 
Lifts  earth  to  Heaven,  ftoops  Heaven  to  earth  ! 

Welcome  —  tho'  not  to  those  gay  flies. 
Gilded  i'   th'  beams  of  earthly   kings. 

Slippery  souls   in   smiling  eyes  — 

But  to  poor  shepherds,  homespun  things. 

Whose  wealth  's  their  flocks,  whose  wit 's  to  be 

Well  read  in   their  fimplicity. 


To  Thee,  meek  Alajefty,  soft  King, 
Of  fimple  graces  and  sweet  loves  ! 


1 82  Chriji. 

Each  of  us   his  lamb  will  bring, 
Each  his  pair  of  filver  doves  I 
At  laft,  in  fire  of  Thy  fair  eyes, 
Ourselves  become  our  own  beft  sacrifice ! 

Crajhaw.      1 637-1650. 


THE   ASCENSION    DAY. 

OUR   Lord  and  brother  who  put  on 
Such   flefh  as  this  we  wear, 
Before  us  up  to   heaven   is  gone. 

Our  places  to  prepare  : 
Captivity  was   captive  then. 
And   He  doth   from   above 
Send  ghoftly  presents  down  to  men. 
For  tokens  of  His  love. 

Each  door  and  everlafting  gate 

To   Him   hath  lifted   been, 
And  in  a  'glorious   wise  thereat 

Our  King  is  enter'd  in  : 
Whom  if  to  follow  we  regard. 

With  love  and  leave  we  may, 
For  He  hath  all  the  means  prepared, 

And   made  an  open  way. 

Then    follow  ;    follow  on   apace 
Our  Captain   to  attend, 


Chrijf. 


^83 


In  that  supreme  and  blefled  place 

Whereto  He  did  ascend  ; 
And  for  His  honor  let  our  voice 

A  fhout  so  hearty  make, 
That   heaven   may  at  our  joy   rejoice, 

And   hell's  foundation  fhake. 

George  Wither. 


WHO    FOLLOWS    IN    HIS   TRAIN  ? 

THE   Son  of  God  goes  forth  to  w^ar, 
A  kingly  crown  to  gain  ; 
His  blood-red  banner  ftreams  afar. 
Who  follows  in   His  train  ? 

Who  beft  can  drink  his  cup  of  woe, 

Triumphant  over  pain, 
Who  patient  bears  his  crofs  belov/, 

He   follows  in   His  train  ! 

That  martyr  firft,   whose  eagle  eye 
Could   look  beyond   the  grave, 

Who  saw  his  Mafter  in  the  fky. 
And  called  on  him  to  save  ; 


Like   Him,  with  pardon  on  his  tongue. 
In   midft  of  mortal  pain. 


184  Chrijt. 

He   prayed  for  those  that  did  the  wrong: 
Who  follows  in   his  train  ? 

A  noble  band,  the  chosen   ^q^^^ 

On   whom   the   Spirit  came, 
Twelve   valiant  souls,  their  hope  they  knew, 

And   mocked  the  torch  of  flame  j 

They  met  the  tyrant's  brandifhed  fteel, 

The  lion's  gory   mane, 
They  bowed  their  necks  the  fliroke   to  feel. 

Who  follows  in  their  train  ? 

A  noble  army,  men  and  boys. 

The   matron  and  the  maid. 
Around  the  throne  of  God  rejoice. 

In  robes  of  light  arrayed. 

They  climbed   the  fteep  ascents  of  heaven. 

Thro'   peril,   toil,  and   pain  ; 
O   God !   to   us  may  grace  be  given, 

To  follow  in  their  train  ! 

Heber. 


Chriji. 


,85 


FOR    ST.    ANDREW'S    DAY. 

^T7"HILST   Andrew,  as  a  fifher,  sought 
V  V    From   pinching  want   his  life  to  free, 
Chrift  call'd  him,  that  he  might  be  taught 
A   fifherman  of  men   to  be. 

And   no   delay   therein   he   made. 
Nor  queftioned  his  Lord's  intent ; 
But  quite  forsaking  all  he  had. 
With   Him  that  called  gladly  went. 

Would  God  we  were  prepared   so 

To  follow   Chrift  when   He  doth  call, 

And  could  as  readily   forego 

Those  nets  which   we  are  snared  withal  ! 

Yea,  would  this  fifherman  of  men. 
Might  us   by  his  example  move 
To  leave  the  world,  as  he  did  then. 
And  by  our  works  our  faith  approve. 


But  precepts  and  examples   fail, 
Till   thou,    O   Lord,  thy  grace   inspireft; 
Vouchsafe  it,  and  we  fhall   prevail 
In  whatsoever  thou   required  : 


1 86  Chrlji. 

Yea,  we  fhall  then  that  good  perceive 
Which  in  thy  service  we   may  find, 
And   for  thy  sake  be  glad  to  leave 
Our  nets,  and  all  our  trafti  behind. 

George  Wither. 


Y 


THE    GOOD   SHEPHERD. 

ES  !   our  Shepherd   leads  with  gentle  hand, 
Through   the   dark   pilgrim-land. 
His   flock,   so   dearly   bought, 
So  long  and  fondly  sought. 

Hallelujah  ! 


When  in  clouds  and   mift  the  weak  ones  stray. 
He  (hows  again  the  way, 
And   points  to  them  afar 
A   bright  and  guiding  ftar. 

Hallelujah  ! 

Tenderly   He  watches  from  on   high 
With  an  unwearied  eye  ; 
He  comforts   and  suftains. 
In  all  their   fears  and   pains. 

Hallelujah  ! 

Through  the  parch'd,  dreary  desert   He  will  guide 
To  the  green   fountain-fide  : 


Chrlji.  187 

Through   the  dark,   l1:ormy  night, 
To   a  calm  land  of  light. 

Hallelujah  ! 

Yes!    His  "little  flock"   are  ne'er  forgot; 
His  mercy  changes   not : 
Our  home  is   safe   above, 
Within   His  arms  of  love. 

Hallelujah  ! 

Krummacher. 


THE    HEART'S    SONG. 

IN  the  filent  midnight  watches, 
Lift  — thy   bosom-door  ! 
How  it  knocketh,   knocketh,  knocketh, 

Knocketh  evermore  \ 
Say  not   't  is   thy   pulse  's   beating  ; 

'T  is  thy  heart  of  fin  : 
'T  is  thy  Saviour  knocks,  and  crieth 
Rise,  and  let  me  in  ! 

Death  comes  down  with   recklefs   footftep 

To  the  hall  and  hut : 
Think  you   Death   will   ft.md   a-knocking 

Where  the  door  is  fhut  ? 
Jesus  waiteth  —  waiteth  —  waiteth  ; 

But  thy  door  is   faft  ! 


Chrijt. 

Grieved,  away  thy  Saviour  goeth  : 
Death  breaks  in  at  laft. 

Then   't  is  thine  to  ftand  —  entreating 

Chrift  to  let  thee  in  : 
At  the  gate  of  heaven  beating, 

Wailing  for  thy  fin. 
Nay,  alas  !   thou   foolifh  virgin, 

Haft  thou  then   forgot, 
Jesus  waited  long  to  know  thee. 

But  he  knows  thee  not  ! 


A.  C.  Coxe. 


TO    WHOM    SHALL    WE    GO? 

"  Lord,  to  whom  Hiall  we  go  ?     Thou  haft  the  words  of  eternal  life." 
John  6  :  68. 

WMEN   our  pureft  delights   are    nipt   in    the   blos- 
som. 
When  those  we  love  beft  are  laid  low  ; 
When   grief  plants  in  secret  her  thorn   in  the  bosom. 
Deserted, — "to  whom  fhall  we  go?" 

When,  with  error  bewildered,  our  path   becomes  dreary. 

And  tears  of  despondency   flow  ; 
When    the  whole   head    is   fick,  and    the  whole    heart   is 
weary. 

Despairing,  —  "  to    whom    fhall   we  go  ?  '' 


Chriji. 


189 


When  the  sad   thirfty  soul  turns  away   from  the  springs 

Of  pleasure  this  world  can   bellow, 
And  fighs   for  another,  and  flutters  its   wings. 

Impatient,  —  "to  whom   fhall  we  go?" 

O   blell:  be   that  light   which   has   parted   the  clouds. 

And   a  path  to  the  pilgrim  can  fhow, 
That  pierces  the  veil  which  the  future  enfhrouds. 

And  tells  us  to  whom  we  (hall  zo  ! 


♦©®*« 


THE   REFUGE. 

WHITHER,    O   whither   fiiould   I   fly, 
But  to   my  loving  Saviour's  breaft  ! 
Secure   within   thine  arms  to  lie. 

And   safe  beneath   thy  wings  to  reft. 

I   have  no  fkill  the  snare  to  fhun, 

But  thou,  O  Chrift,  my  wisdom  art  : 

I  ever  unto  ruin  run  ; 

But  thou  art  greater  than   my   heart 


Foolifh,  and  impotent,  and  blind, 

Lead   me  a  way  I  have  not  known  ; 

Bring  me  where  I   my  heaven   may  find, 
The  heaven  of  lovins:  thee  alone. 


190  Chriji. 

Enlarge  my  heart  to  make  thee  room  ; 

Enter,  and   in   me  ever  ftay  : 
The  crooked  then  fhall  straight  become  ; 

The  darknefs  fhall  be   loft  in  day. 


IVeJley. 


THE   VINE. 
John   15 :    1-5. 

JESUS,  immutably  the  same. 
Thou  true  and  living  vine. 
Around  thy  all-supporting  stem 
My  feeble  arms  I  twine. 

Quicken'd   by  thee  and  kept  alive, 

I  flourifh  and  bear  fruit  ; 
My  life  I   from   thy  sap  derive. 

My  vigor  from  thy  root. 

Grafted   in  thee  by  grace  alone. 

In   growth   1   daily   rise  ; 
And  springing  up   from   thee,  the  vine, 

My  top  fhall  reach  the  fkies. 

I  can  do  m.thing  without  thee  ; 
My  flrength  is  wholly  thine  ; 


Chriji.  JQI 

Wither'd  and  barren  fhould   I   be 
If  sever'd   from  the  vine. 

Upon   my  leaf,  when  parch'd  with  heat, 

Refrefhing  dew  ihall  drop  ; 
The  plant  which  thy  right  hand   hath  set. 

Shall  ne'er  be  rooted  up. 

Each  moment  watered  by  thy  care, 

And   fenced   with  power  divine. 
Fruit  to  eternal  life  fhall  bear 

The  feebleft  branch  of  thine. 

Toplady.      1740-17  78. 

HYMN. 

JESUS  !   the   ladder  of  my   faith 
Refts  on  the  jasper  walls  of  heaven  ; 
And  through  the   veiling  clouds  I  catch 
Faint  vifions  of  the  myftic  Seven! 

The  glory  of  the  rainbowed  throne 

Illumes  those  clouds  like  lambent  flame  ; 

As  once,  on  earth,  thy  love  divine 

Burned  thro'  the  robes  of  human  fhame. 

Thou  art  the  same,  O   gracious  Lord  ! 

The  same  dear  Chrift   that  thou  wert  then  ; 


192  Chriji. 

And  all  the  praises  angels  fing 

Delight  thee  lefs  than  prayers  of  men  ! 

We  have   no  tears  thou   wilt  not  dry  ; 

We  have  no  wounds  thou  wilt  not  heal  ; 
No  sorrows  pierce  our  human  hearts 

That  thou,  dear  Saviour !  doft  not  feel. 

Thy  pity,  like  the  dew,  diftils  ; 

And  thy  compafTion,  like  the  light, 
Our  every  morning  overfills, 

And  crowns  with   ftars  our  every  night. 

Let  not  the  world's  rude  confliiSt  drown 

The  charmed   mufic  of  thy  voice. 
That  calls  all  weary  ones  to  refl. 

And  bids  all  mourning  souls  rejoice! 

H.  M.  Kimball. 


IN   SORROW. 

"Y  soul,  why  doft   thou   in   my  breafl 
With  griefs  affliiled  grow  ; 
Why  are  my  thoughts  to  my  unreft, 

In  me  increased  so  ? 
And  in  thyself  by  mufings  vain, 
Why  doft  thou  seek  for  ease, 


Cbriji. 

Since  thou  ftill  more  augment'ft  thy  pain, 
By  such  like   means  as  these  ? 

When  paflion  hath  enflaved  thy  heart, 

Why   seelcs't  thou   comfort  there  ; 
When  thou  deprived  of  reason  art. 

What  reas'ning  cureth  care  ? 
The   more  thy   mind    by   mufing  thinks 

From   sorrow's  depths   to   rise  ; 
The   further  downward   ftill  it  finks, 

The  nearer  hell   it  lies. 

Let,  therefore,  hence  with   speed  be  thrown 

Those  thoughts  which  thee  attend. 
Before  they  thither  prefs  thee  down 

Whence   no  man   may  ascend  : 
And  let  on   Him  thy  mufings  dwell 

Who,  in  mere  love  to  thee. 
Hath  dived  the  depths  of  death  and  hell, 

That  thou   might'st  eased   be. 


193 


Sweet  Jesu  !   for  thy  paflion  sake. 

This   favour  fhow   to  me  ; 
Out  of  my   heart  the  sorrows  take 

Which   therein   raging  be  : 
My  paflion  calm,  my  soul  dire6l. 

Her  thoughts   on    Thee  to   place  ; 
On  my  much   troubled   mind  refle6l 

The  brightnefs  of  thy  face. 
13 


194  Chriji. 

Yea,  let  contrition  for  my   fin 

So  purge  out  carnal  grief, 
That  joy  ceieftial  may  bring  in 

The  fullnefs  of  relief: 
So  this  my  sorrow  {hail  but  add 

A  relifh  to  my  joy. 
And  cause  contentments  to  be  had. 

Which  nothing  can  deftroy. 

George  Wither. 


CHRIST   THE    PURIFIER. 

HE   that  from  drofs  would  win  the  precious  ore. 
Bends  o'er  the  crucible  an  earneft  eye. 
The  subtle  searching  procefs  to  explore. 

Left  the  one  brilliant  moment   fhould  pafs  by. 
When   in  the  molten  silver's  virgin  mafs 
He  meets  his  picflured   face,  as  in  a  glafs. 

Thus  in  God's  furnace  are  his   people  tried  ; 

Thrice  happy  they  who  to  the  end  endure  ! 
But  who  the  fiery  trial  may  abide  ? 

Who  from  the  crucible  come  forth  so  pure, 
That  He,  whose  eye  of  flame  looks  through  the  whole. 

May  see  His  image  perfect  in  his  soul  ? 

Not  with  an  evanescent  glimpse  alone. 
As  in  that  mirror  the  refiner's  face, 


Chriji.  195 

But  ftampt  with   Heaven's  broad  fignet,  there  be  fhown 
Immanuel's  features,  full  of  truth  and  grace, 

And  round  that  seal  of  love  this  motto  be, 
>'  Not  for  a  7notnent^  but —  Eternity." 

Montgomery. 


THAT    ROCK    IS    CHRIST. 

MY   hope  is  built  on  nothing  lefs 
Than  Jesus'  blood  and  righteousnefs  ; 
I  dare  not  truft  the  sweeteft  frame, 
But  wholly  lean  on  Jesus'  name. 

On  Chrift  the  solid  rock  I  ftand, 
All  other  ground  is   finking  sand. 

When  darknefs  veils  his  lovely  face, 

I  reft  on  his  unchanging  grace  ; 

In  every  high  and  ftormy  gale. 

My  anchor  holds  within  the  veil. 

On  Chrift  the  solid  rock  I  ftand, 
All  other  ground  is  finking  sand. 

His  oath,  his  covenant,   and  blood, 

Support   me  in   the   finking  flood  ; 

When  every  earthly  prop  gives  way. 

He  then  is  all  my  hope  and  ftay. 

On  Chrift  the  solid  rock  I  ftand, 
All  other  ground  is   finking  sand. 


196 


Chri/i. 


When  I  fhall   launch  to  worlds  unseen, 

O   may  I  then  be  found  in  him, 

Draft  in  his  righteousnefs  alone, 

Faultlefs  to  ftand  before  the  throne. 

On  Chrift  the  solid  rock  I  ftand. 
All  other  ground   is  finking  sand. 

Rees. 


JESUS    OF    NAZARETH    PASSETH    BY. 

WATCHER,  who  wakeft  by  the  bed  of  pain. 
While  ftars   sweep  on  with  their  midnight  train. 
Stifling  the  tear  for  thy  loved  one's  sake. 
Holding  thy  breath  left  his  fleep  fhould  break, 
In  thy  lonelieft  hour  there  's  a   helper  nigh, 
"  Jesus  of  Nazareth  pafleth  by." 


Stranger,  afar  from  thy  native  land. 
Whom  no  man  takes  with  a  brother's  hand. 
Table  and   hearthftones  are  glowing  free. 
Casements  are  sparkling,  but  not   for  thee. 
There  is  one  can  tell  of  a  home  on   high, 
"Jesus  of  Nazareth  pafleth   by." 

Sad  one;  in  secret  bending  low, 

A  dart  in  thy  heart,  that  the  world  may  not  know, 

Wreftling  the  favor  of  God  to  win. 

The  seal  of  pardon  for  days  of  fin. 


Chriji. 

Prefs  on,  prefs  on,  with   thy  prayerful  cry, 
"  Jesus  of  Nazareth   palleth   by." 

Mourner,  who  fitteth   in  church-yard  lone, 
Scanning  the  lines  on  that  marble  flone, 
Plucking  the  weeds  from  thy   childrens'  bed, 
Planting  the  myrtle  and  rose  inftead, 
Look  up  from  the  tomb  with  thy  tearful  eye, 
"  Jesus  of  Nazareth  paffeth  by." 

Fading  one,  with  the  hectic  ftreak. 
In  thy  vein   of  fire  and  thy  wafted  cheek, 
Fear'st  thou  the  fhade  of  the  darkened  vale. 
Look  to  the  guide  who  can  never  fail, 
He  hath  trod  it  Himself,   He  will  hear  thy  cry, 
"Jesus  of  Nazareth  palFeth  by." 


'97 


-otOX(>X>o- 


CHRIST. 


JESUS,  my  Saviour,  look  on  me. 
For  I  am  weary  and  oppreft, 
I  come  to  caft  my  soul  on  thee. 
Thou  art  my  reji. 

Look  down  on  me,  for  I  am  weak  ; 
I   feel  the  toilsome  journey's  length  ; 


198  Chrij}. 

Thine  aid  omnipotent  I  seek  ; 

Thou  art  my  Jlrength. 

I  am   bewilder'd  on  my  way; 
Dark  and  tempeftuous  is  the  night ; 

0  fhed  thou  forth  some   cheering  ray  j 

Thou  art  my  light. 

Why  feel  I  desolate  and  lone  ? 
Thy  praises  fhould   my  thoughts  employ  ; 
Thy  presence  can  pour  gladnefs  down  ; 
Thou  art  my  joy. 

Thou  haft  on  me  so  much   beftow'd, 
Surely  I  may  relinquifti  health  ; 
Thou  'ft  made  me  rich,  yea,  rich  towards  God  ; 
Thou  art  my  wealth. 

1  hear  the  ftorms  around   me  rise. 

But,  when  I   dread  the  impending  fhock, 
My  spirit  to  her  refuge  flies  ; 

Thou  art  mv  rock. 


When  the  accuser  flings  his  darts, 
I   look  to  thee  —  my  terrors  cease  ; 
Thy  crofs  a  hiding-place  imparts  j 

Thou  art  my  peace. 

Vain  is  all  human   help  for  me, 
I  dare  not  truft  an  earthly  prop  ; 


Chriji.  1 99 

My  sole  reliance  is  on  thee ; 

Thou  art  my  hope. 

Full  many  a  conflicfl  mulT:  be  fought ! 
But  {hall   I   periOi  ?   ftiall   I  yield  ? 
Is  that  bright  motto  given   for  nought, 
Thou  art  my  Jhield  ? 

Standing  alone  on  Jordan's  brink, 
In  that  tremendous,  lateft  ftrife, 
Thou   wilt   not  suffer  me  to   fink  ; 

Thou  art  my  life. 

Thou  wilt  my  every  want  supply 
E'en  to  the  end,  whate'er  befall  j 
Through  life,  in  death,  eternally, 

Thou   art   MY   all. 

Macduff. 


CHRIST'S    INVITATION. 

WITH   tearful  eyes  I  look  around  ; 
Life  seems  a  dark  and   flormy  sea  ; 
Yet  midft  the  gloom  I   hear  a  sound, 
A  heavenly  whisper  —  "Come  to  me." 

It  tells  me  of  a   place  of  reft  ; 

It  tells  me  where  my  soul   may  flee  ; 


200  Chr'ijl. 

Oh  !   to  the  weary,   faint,  opprefl:. 

How  sweet  the  bidding  —  "  Come  to  me 

When  the  poor  heart  with  anguifh  learns 
That  earthly  props  refigned   muft  be, 
And  from  each  broken  ciftern  turns, 
It  hears  the  accents, — "Come  to  me." 

When  againft   fin  I   ftrive  in  vain, 
And  cannot   from  its  yoke  get  free. 
Sinking  beneath   the  heavy  chain, 
The   words  arreft  me  — "  Come  to  me." 

When  nature  fhudders,  loath  to   part 
From  all  I   love,  enjoy,  and  see  ; 
When  a  faint  chill   fteals  o'er  my  heart, 
A  sweet  voice  utters — "Come  to  me." 


"  Come,  for  all  else   muft  fail  and  die  ; 
Earth  is  no  refting-place   for  thee  : 
Heavenward  direil  the  weeping  eye  ; 
I  am  thy  portion  —  "  Come   to  me." 

O   voice  of  mercy  !   voice  of  love  ! 
In   death's   lafl:   fearful   agony  ; 
Support  me  —  cheer  me — from  above. 
And  gently  whisper  —  "Come  to  me." 


ChriJ}. 


201 


"MY    BELOVED    IS    MINE,  AND    I    AM   HIS." 

LONG  did   I   toil,   and   knew  no  earthly  reft  ; 
Far  did   I    rove,   and   knew  no  certain   home  ; 
At   laft    r   sought  them   in    His   fheltering  breaft, 
Who  opes  his  arms,  and  bids  the  weary  come. 
With   hint   I    found   a   home,   a   reft   divine  ; 
And   I   fince  then   am    His,   and   he   is   mine. 

Yes,   He   is   mine!   and   nought   of  earthly  things, 
Not  all   the   charms  of  pleasure,   wealth,  or  power, 
The   fame  of  heroes,  or  the  pomp  of  kings. 
Could   tempt   me   to   forego   his  love  an   hour. 
Go,  worthlefs  world,   I   cry,  with  all  that 's  thine  ! 
Go  !    I   my  Saviour's  am,  and  he   is   mine. 

The  good  I   have  is  from   His   ftores   supplied  ; 
The  ill  is  only  what  he  deems  the  beft. 
He  for  my  friend,   I  'm   rich  with  nought  befide  ; 
And  poor  without  him,   though  of  all  poflefT'd. 
Changes  may  come  —  I   take,  or  I  refign  — 
Content  while  I  am   His,  while   he  is  mine. 


Whate'er  may  change,  in   Him  no  change  is   seen, 
A   glorious   Sun,   that   wanes   not,   nor  declines  ; 
Above  the  clouds  and   ftorms  he  walks  serene, 
And  sweetly  on   his  people's   darknefs  fhines. 


202 


Chriji. 


All   may   depart  —  I   fret  not  nor  repine, 
While   I   my   Saviour's  am,  while   he  is  mine. 

He  ftays  me  falling ;  lifts  me  up  when  down  j 
Reclaims   me  wandering  ;  guards  from  every  foe  ; 
Plants  on  my  worthlefs  brow  the  viilor's  crown  ; 
Which,  in  return,  before  his  feet  I   throw, 
Grieved   that   I   cannot   better  grace  his  fhrine 
Who  deigns  to  own   me   His,  as   he  is  mine. 

While  here,  alas  !   I   know  but  half  his  love. 
But  half  discern   him,  and  but  half  adore  ; 
But  when   I   meet  him  in  the  realms  above, 
I   hope  to  love   him   better,  praise  him  more. 
And  feel,  and  tell,  amid  the  choir  divine, 
How  fully  I  am  His,  and  he  is  mine! 


Lyte 


I  JOURNEY  through  a  desert  drear  and  wild. 
Yet  is  my  heart   by  such  sweet  thoughts  beguiled 
Of  Him  on   whom   I   lean,  my  rtrength,   my  ftay, 
I  can  forget  the  sorrows  of  the  way. 

Thoughts  of  His  love  —  the  root  of  every  grace. 
Which  finds  in  this  poor  heart  a  dwelling-place  ; 
The  sunfhine  of  my  soul,  than  day  more  bright. 
And  my  calm  pillow  of  repose  by  night. 


Chriji.  203 

Thoughts  of  His  sojourn  in  this  vale  of  tears  — 
The   tale  of  love  unfolded  in  those  years 
Of  finlefs  suffering,  and   patient  grace, 
I    love  again,   and  yet  again   to   trace. 

Thoughts  of  His  glory  —  on  the  crofs  I  gaze, 
And  there  behold  its  sad,  yet  healing  rays  ; 
Beacon  of  hope,   which  lifted   up  on  high, 
Illumes  w^ith   heav'nly  light  the  tear-dimm'd  eye. 

Thoughts  of  His  coming — for  that  joyful  day 
In   patient   hope   I   watch,   and  wait,  and   pray  ; 
The  dawn  draws  nigh,  the  midnight  fliadows  flee, 
Oh   what  a  sunrise   will   that  advent  he! 

Thus  while  I  journey   on,  my  Lord  to  meet, 
My  thoughts  and   meditations  are  so   sweet, 
Of  Him  on  whom  I  lean,  my  ftrength,   my   ftay, 
I  can  forget  the  sorrows  of  the  way. 


=s.7#f<®<l^^=s^- 


COURAGE. 


STAND  but  your  ground,  your  ghoftly  foes  will  fly 
Hell  trembles  at  a  heaven-direiled  eye  ; 
Choose  rather  to  defend  than  to  affail  — 
Self-confidence   will   in   the  conflicfl   fail  : 


204 


Chriji. 


When  you  are  challenged,  you   may  dangers  meet  — 
True  courage  is  a  fixed,  not  sudden   heat ; 
Is  always   humble,  lives   in  self-diftruft, 
And   will   itself  into  no  danger  thruft. 
Devote  yourself  to   God,  and   you   will   find 
God   fights  the  battles  of  a  will  refigned. 
Love  Jesus  !   Love  will  no  base  fear  endure  — 
Love  Jesus  !  and  of  conqueft  reft  secure. 

Bijhop  Ken. 


— ©©©— 


MORNING  HYMN. 


"OLE  the  Day-Spring  from  afar, 
jO   Ufher'd   by  the  morning  ftar !  " 
Hafte  ;  to   Him  who  sends  the  light, 
Hallow  the  remains  of  night. 

Souls,  put  on  your  glorious  drefs, 
Waking  into  righteousnefs  ; 
Clothed  with   Chrift  aspire  to  fhine, 
Radiance   he  of  light  divine  j 


Beam  of  the  eternal  beam, 
He  in   God,  and   God  in  him! 
Strive  we  him   in  us   to  see, 
Transcript  of  the  Deity. 


ChrijL  205 


Burft  we  then  the  bands  of  death, 
Rais'd  by  his   all-quiclc'iiing  breath  ; 
Long  we  to  be  loos'd   from  earth, 
Struggle  into  second  birth. 

Spent  at  length   in  nature's  night ; 
Chrift  attends  to  give  us  light, 
Chrift  attends   himself  to  give  ; 
God  we  now  may  see,  and  live. 

Tho'  the  outward  man  decay, 
Form'd  within  us   day  by  day. 
Still  the  inner  man  we  view, 
Chrift  creating  all  things  new. 

Thou  the  life,  the  truth,    the  way, 
Suffer  us  no  more  to  ftray  : 
Give  us  Lord,  and  ever  give, 
Thee  to  know,  in   thee  to  live. 


Wejley. 


206 


Chrlji. 


A   SUPPLICATION. 

OWA Y  for  all  that  live !   heal   us  by  pain  and  lofs  ; 
Pill  all  our  years   with   toil,  and  blefs  us  with   thy 
rod. 
Thy  bonds  bring  wider  freedom  ;  climbing,  by  the  crofs, 
Wins    that    brave   height    where   looms   the   city    of   our 
God! 

Hallow  our  wit  with  prayer  :  our  maftery  fteep  in  meek- 

nefs  ; 
Pour  on  our  fludy   inspiration's  holy  light  ; 
Hew   out,    for  Chrift's    dear   Church,  a   Future   without 

weaknefs. 
Quarried   from  thine  Eternal   Beauty,   Order,  Might ! 

Met,  there,  mankind's  great  Brotherhood  of  Souls  and 
Powers, 

Raise  thou   full  praises   from  its   fartheft  corners  dim  ; 

Pour  down,  O  fteadfaft  Sun,  thy  beams  on  all  its  tow- 
ers ; 

Roll  through  its  world-wide  spaces  Faith's  majeflic 
hymn. 


Come,   age    of   God's    own    Truth,    after    man's    age   of 

fables  ! 
Seed  sown   in   Eden,  yield  the  nations'  healing  tree! 


ChrijL  207 

Ebal  and  Sinai,  Mamre's  tents,  the  Hebrew  tables. 
All  look  towards  Olivet,  and   bend   to  Calvary. 

Fold  of  the  tender  Shepherd  !   rise,  and  spread  ! 
Arch  o'er  our  frailty  roofs  of  everlafting  ftrength  ! 
Be  all  the   Body  gathered  to  its   living   Head  ! 
Wanderers  we  faint  :   O,  let  us   find  our  Lord  at  length  I 

Rev.  F.  D.  Huntington. 


LIFE'S   myftery  —  deep,  reftlefs  as  the  Ocean  — 
Hath  Surged  and  wailed  for  ages  to  and   fro  ; 
Earth's  generations  watch  its  ceaselefs  motion 

As  in  and  out   its  hollow   moanings  flow  ; 
Shivering  and  yearning  by  that  unknown  sea, 
Let  my  soul  calm   itself,   O  Chrift,  in  thee  ! 

Life's  sorrows,  with   inexorable  power. 
Sweep  desolation  o'er  this   mortal   plain  ; 

And  human  loves  and  hopes   fly  as   the  chafF 

Borne  by  the  whirlwind   from  the  ripened  grain  :  — 

Ah,   when   before   that  blaft   my   hopes   all  flee. 

Let  my  soul   calm   itself,   O   Chrift,  in  *thee  ! 

Between  the  myfteries  of  death  and  life 

Thou   ftandeft,  loving,  guiding  —  not   explaining; 
We  afk,   and   thou  art  filent  —  yet  we  gaze. 


208  ChrijL 

And  our  charmed   hearts   forget  their   drear   complain- 
ing ! 
No  cruftiing  fate  —  no  ftony   deftiny  ? 
Thou   Lamb  that  hast  been   (lain,  we  reft  in  thee  ! 

The  many  waves  of  thought,  the   mighty  tides, 
The  ground-swell  that  rolls  up  from  otner  lands, 

From   far-off  worlds,  from  dim  eternal  fliores 

Whose  echo  dafhes  on  life's  wave-worn  ftrands,  — 

This  vague,  dark  tumult  of  the  inner  sea 

Grows  c  dm,  grows  bright,   O,  risen  Lord,  in  thee  ! 


Thy  pierced  hand  guides  the  myfterious  wheels  ; 

Thy    thorn-crowned    brow    now    wears    the    crown   of 
power  ; 
And  when  the  dark  enigma  preffeth  sore 

Thy     patient     voice     saith,     ''  Watch     with     me     one 
hour!  " 
As  finks  the  moaning  river  in  the  sea 
In  filver  peace  —  so  finks  my  soul  in  Thee! 

Harriet  Beecher  Stowe. 


God. 


209 


GOD. 


•  Whom  have  I  in  heaven  but  thee  ?  and  there  is  none  upon  earth  tliat 
I  defire  befidc  thee."     Psalm  73:   25. 

I    LOVE    (and   have  some  cause  to  love)    the   earth; 
She  is   my  Maker's  creature,  therefore  good : 
She  is  my  mother,   for  fhe  gave  me  birth  ; 
She  is  my   tender  nurse  ;  {he  gives  me  food  : 

But  what  's  a  creature,  Lord,  compar'd  w^ith  thee  r 
Or  what  's   my  mother,  or  my  nurse,  to  me  ? 


I   love  the  air  ;   her  dainty  sweets   refrefh 

A4y  drooping  soul,  and  to  new  sweets  invite  me  ; 

Her  fhrill-mouth'd  choir  suftain   me  with  their  flefh; 

And  with  their  Polyphonian  notes  delight  me  : 

But  what 's  the  air,  or  all  the  sweets,  that  fhe 
Can  blefs   my  soul  withal,  compar'd  to  thee  ? 

I  love  the  sea  ;  fhe  is   my  fellow-creature. 
My  careful  purveyor  ;  fhe  provides  me  flore  : 
She  walls  me  round  ;  fhe  makes  my  diet  greater  ; 
She  wafts  my  treasure  from  a  foreign   fhore  : 
14 


210 


God. 


But,  Lord  of  oceans,  when  compar'd  with  thee, 
What  is  the  ocean,  or  her  wealth,  to  me  ? 

To  Heaven's  high  city  I  dire6l  my  journey. 
Whose  spangled  suburbs  entertain  mine  eye  ; 
Mine  eye,  by  contemplation's  great  attorney, 
Transcends  the  cryftal  pavement  of  the  fky  : 

But  what  is   Heav'n,  great  God,  compar'd   to  thee  ? 

Without  thy  presence,  Heav'n  's  no   Heav'n   to  me. 

Without  thy  presence,  earth  gives  no   refe6lion  ; 

Without  thy  presence,  sea  affords  no  treasure  ; 

Without  thy  presence,  air's  a  rank  infedtion  ; 

Without  thy  presence,   Heav'n  itself 's  no  pleasure; 
If  not  polTefT'd,   if  not  enjoy'd  in  thee. 
What 's  earth,  or  sea,  or  air,  or  Heaven,  to   me  ? 

Francis  Quarks. 


IN  all  extremes,   Lord,  thou  art  flill 
The  mount  whereto  my  hopes  do  flee  ; 
O  make  my  soul  deteft  all  ill. 

Because  so    much  abhorred  by  thee  : 
Lord,  let  thy  gracious  trials  fliow 
That  I   am  juft,  or  make  me   so. 

Shall  mountain,  desert,  beaft,  and  tree. 
Yield  to  that  heavenly  voice  of  thine  ; 


God.  2 1 1 

And  {hall  that  voice  not  ftartle  me, 

Nor  rtir  this  ftone  —  this   heart  of  mine? 
No,  Lord,  till   thou  new-bore  mine  ear, 
Thy  voice  is  loft,   I   cannot  hear. 

Fountain  of  light,  and  living  breath. 
Whose  mercies  never  fail  nor  fade. 

Fill  me  with  life  that  hath  no  death. 
Fill   me  with   light   that   hath   no  (hade  ; 

Appoint  the  remnant  of  my  days 

To  see  thy  power,  and  fing  thy  praise. 

Lord,  God  of  gods,  before  whose  throne 
Stand   ftorms  and   fire,   O   what  fhall    we 

Return  to  heaven,  that  is  our  own. 
When  all  the  world  belongs  to  thee  ? 

We  have  no  offering  to  impart. 

But  praises,  and  a  wounded  heart. 

0  Thou  who  fitteft  in  heaven,  and  seeft 
My  deeds   without,   my  thoughts   within, 

Be  thou   my  prince,  be  thou   my  prieft, — 

Command  my  soul,  and  cure  my  fm  : 
How  bitter  my  affliftions  be 

1  care  not,  so  I   rise  to  Thee. 

What  I  poffefs,  or  what  I  crave. 

Brings  no  content,  great  God,  to  me. 

If  what   I   would   or  what   I   have 

Be   not  pofTefTed  and  blefTed  in  Thee  : 


212  God. 

What  I  enjoy,  oh,  make  it   mine, 

In  making  me  —  that  have  it — Thine. 

When  winter-fortunes  cloud  the  brows 

Of  summer-friends,  —  when  eyes  grow  ftrange, 

When  plighted  faith   forgets  its   vows, — 

When  earth  and   all  things  in  it  change,  — 

O  Lord,   thy  mercies  fail  me  never,  — 

When  once  Thou  loveft.  Thou  loveft  forever. 

yohn  ^uarles^  son  of  Francis^  died  in  1665. 


-c<C^5X(>>*o- 


PSALM  cxxr. 

Up  to  those  bright  and  gladsome  hills, 
Whence  flowes  my  weal  and  mirth, 
I  look,  and  figh   for  Him  who  fills 
Unseen  both  heaven  and  earth. 

He  is  alone  my  help,  and  hope. 

That  I  fhall  not  be  moved  ; 
His  watchful  eye  is  ever  ope. 

And  guardeth  his  beloved. 

The  glorious  God  is  my  sole  ftay. 
He  is  my  sun  and  fhade  : 


God. 

The  cold  by  night,  the  heat  by  day, 
Neither  fhall   me  invade. 

He  keeps  nie  from  the  spite  of  foes  : 
Doth  all  their  plots  controul ; 

And  is  a  fhield,  not  reckoning  those. 
Unto  my  very  soul. 


213 


Whether  abroad  amidft  the  crowd, 

Or  else  within   my  door, 
He  is  my  pillar  and  my  cloud. 

Now  and  forevermore. 

Henry  V a  ugh  an. 


iiiflQCii 


PSALM  CXLVIir. 

COME,  oh !   come,  with   sacred  lays. 
Let  us  sound  the  Almighty's  praise  ; 
Hither  bring  in  true  consent. 
Heart,  and  voice,  and  inftrument. 
Let  the  orpharion  sweet, 
With  the  harp  and  viol  meet  : 
To  your  voices  tune  the  lute  : 
Let  not  tongue   nor  firing  be  mute  : 
Not  a  creature  dumb  be  found. 
That  hath  either  voice  or  sound. 


214 


God. 


Let  such  things  as  do  not  live, 
In  ftill  mufic  praises  give  ; 
Low^ly  pipe,  ye  worms  that  creep 
On   the   earth   or  in   the  deep  ; 
Loud  alolt  your  voices  ftrain, 
Beafts  and   monfters  of  the   main  ; 
Birds,  your  warbHng  treble   fing  ; 
Clouds,  your  peals  of  thunder  ring  j 
Sun  and  moon  exalted   higher. 
And  you  ftars,  augment  the  quire. 

Come,  ye  sons  of  human  race. 
In  this  chorus  take  your  place. 
And  amid   this  mortal  throng. 
Be  you  mafters  of  the  song. 
Angels  and  celeftial  powers. 
Be  the  noblefl:  tenor  yours  j 
Let  in  praise  of  God  the  sound. 
Run  a  never-ending   round. 
That  our  holy  hymn  may  be 
Everlafting  as  is  He. 


From  the  earth's   vaft  hollow  womb, 
Mufic's  deepeft  bafs  fhall  come. 
Sea  and  floods,   from  fhore  to  fhore. 
Shall  the  counter-tenor  roar. 
To  this  concert,  when  we  fing, 
Whiflling  winds,  your  descant  bring : 
Which   may  bear  the  sound  above 
Where  the  orb  of  fire  doth  move, 


God.  2 1 5 

And  so  climb   from  sphere  to  sphere, 
Till  our  song  the  Almighty   hear. 

So  fhall   He  from  heaven's  high   tower 
On   the  earth   his  blefling  ftiower  ; 
All  this  huge  wide  orb  we  see, 
Shall  one  quire,  one  temple  be  ; 
There  our  voices  we  will  rear, 
Till  we  fill   it  everywhere  : 
And   enforce   the   fiends   that  dwell 
In  the  air,  to  fink  to  hell. 
Then,  oh  !  come,  with   sacred  lays. 
Let  us  sound  the  Almighty's  praise. 

George  JVither.      1588— 1677. 


PSALM    XXIII. 

HAPPY   me!  O   happy  (heep 
Whom   my   God   vouchsafes   to   keep  ; 
Even   my  God,   even   he   it   is 
That  points   me  to   these   ways   of  blifs  j 
On  whose  paftures  cheerful   Spring 
All  the  year  doth   fit  and  fing. 
And,  rejoicing,  smiles  to  see 
Their  green   backs  wear  his  livery. 
When   my  wayward  breath  is  flying 
He   calls  home   my  soul   from   dyino;, 


2  1 6  God. 

Strokes  and  tames   my  rabid  grief. 
And  does   woo  me  into  life  : 
When  my  fimple  weaknefs  ftrays, 
Tangled  in  forbidden   ways, 
He,  my   Shepherd,  is   my  guide. 
He's  before   me,  on  my  fide. 
And  behind   me,   He  beguiles 
Craft  in  all  her  knotty  wiles  : 
He  expounds  the  giddy  wonder 
Of  my  weary   fteps,  and   under 
Spreads  a  path  clear  as  the  day. 
Where  no  churlifli  rub  says  nay. 
To  my  joy-condu6led  feet, 
Whilft  they  gladly  go  to  meet 
Grace  and   Peace,  to  meet  new  lays 
Tuned  to  my  great  Shepherd's  praise. 
Come  now  all  ye  terrors,  sally, 
Mufter  forth   into  the   valley. 
Where  triumphant  darknefs  hovers 
With  a  sable  wing,  that  covers 
Brooding  horror.      Come  then,  Death, 
Let  the  damps  of  thy  dull  breath 
Overfhadow  even   the   fhade. 
And   make   Darknefs'  self  afraid  ; 
There   my  feet,  even  there,  {hall  find 
Way  for  a  resolved  mind. 
Still  my  Shepherd,  (till  my   God, 
Thou  art  with   me  ;   ftill   thy  rod, 
And   thy   ftaff,  whose  influence 
Gives   dire61:ion,   gives  defence. 


God. 


217 


At  the  whisper  of  thy  word 
Crown'd  abundance  spreads   my  board  : 
Mow   my   head   in   ointment  swims  ! 
How   my  cup  o'erlooks  her  brims  ! 
So,  even  so  ftill  may  I   move 
By  the   line   of  thy   dear  love  ; 
Still   may   thy  sweet   mercy   spread 
A   Ihady  arm  above  my  head, 
About  my   paths  ;  so  fhall  I   find 
The   fair  centre  of  my    mind. 
Thy  temple,  and  those  lovely  walls 
Bright  ever  with   a  beam   that   falls 
Frefh  from  the  pure  glance  of  Thine  eye. 
Lighting  to   Eternity. 
There   I  '11   dwell   forever,   there 
Will   I   find   a  purer  air 
To  feed   my  life  with,  there  I  '11  sup, 
Balm  and   neiSlar  in   my  cup. 
And  thence  my  ripe  soul  will   I  breathe 
Warm  into  the  arms  of  Death. 

Richard  Crajhaw. 


2i8  God. 


THE   GOODNESS   OF   GOD. 

ALL  praise  and  thanks  to  God  moft  High, 
The  Father  of  all   Love  ! 
The  God  who  doeth  wondroufly, 

The  God  who  from   above 
My  soul  with  richeft  solace   fills, 
The  God  who  every  sorrow  ftills  ; 

Give  to  our  God  the  glory  ! 

The  hoft:  of  heaven  thy  praises  tell. 

All  thrones  bow  down  to  thee, 
And  all  who  in  thy  fhadow  dwell. 

In  earth  and  air  and  sea. 
Declare  and  laud  their  Maker's  might. 
Whose   wisdom  orders  all  things  right ; 

Give  to  our  God  the  glory  ! 

And  for  the  creatures  he  hath   made. 

Our  God   fliall   well   provide  ; 
His  grace  fhall  be  their  conftant  aid. 

Their  guard  on  every  fide  ; 
His  kingdom  ye  may  surely  truft, 
There  all  is  equal,   all  is  jurt:  ; 

Give  to  our  God  the  glory  ! 


God. 

I   sought  him   in   my   hour  of  need  ; 

Lord  God,  now  hear  my  prayer  ! 
For  death   he  gave  me  life  indeed, 

And  comfort  for  despair  ; 
For  this   my  thanks  fhall  endlefs  be, 
Oh  thank  him,   thank  him   too  with    me  ; 

Give  to  our  God  the  glory  ! 

The  Lord  is  never  far  away, 

Nor  sundered   from   his   flock ; 
He  is  their  refuge  and  their  ftay. 

Their  peace,  their  truft,  their  rock. 
And  with  a  mother's  watchful  love 
He  guides  them  wheresoe'er  they  rove. 

Give  to  our  God   the  glory  ! 

And  when  earth  cannot  comfort  more. 

Nor  earthly  help  avail. 
The  Maker  comes  himself,  whose  ftore 

Of  blefling  cannot  fail. 
And  bends  on  them   a  Father's  eyes 
Whom  earth  all  reft  and   hope  denies  : 

Give  to  our  God  the  glory  ! 


2.9 


Ah  then  till  life  hath  reached   its  bound, 

My  God,  r  11  worfhip  thee. 
The  chorus  of  thy  praise  fhall  sound 

Far  over  land  and  sea ; 
Oh  soul  and  body  now  rejoice, 
My  heart  send   forth  a  gladsome  voice  : 

Give  to  our  God  the  glory  I 


220  God. 

All  ye   who   name  Chrift's  holy  name, 

Give  to  our  God  the  glory ! 
Ye  who  the  Father's  power  proclaim, 

Give  to  our  God  the  glory  ! 
All  idols  under  foot  be  trod, 
The  Lord  is  God!     The  Lord  is  God  ! 

Give  to  our  God  the  glory  ! 

J.  J.  Schutz.      1673. 


"WHOM    HAVE   I   IN    HEAVEN    BUT   THEE? 

THOU   art  my  all  —  to  Thee  I   flee; 
Take  me,  oh,  take  me  to  thy  keeping  ! 
A-lake   me   thy   vine,  thy  hufbandry  ; 

Be  thine  the  seed-time,  thine  the  reaping. 

For  what  on   earth  but  tells  thy  power  ? 

And   what  but  makes  thy  love  its  theme  ? 
I  read  it  in  the   vernal  fhower. 

It  cheers  me  in  the  summer  beam  : 

It  glows  while  memory  lingers  yet 
O'er  hours  a  mother's  love  beguiled  ; 

For,  ah  !  a  mother  may  forget. 

But  Thou  wilt  not  forget  thy  child. 

T   had  a  friend  —  nor  false  his  love  ; 
But  him  on  earth  no   more  I  see  ; 


God. 


221 


O  thou  unchanging  friend   above, 
What  is  an  earthly  friend  to  Thee  ? 

Give  me  no  bright  beheft  of  care, 

No  grovelling  boon  of  envied  sod, 
No  hopes  that  lead  but  to  despair  j 

Ease,  honors,  wealth,  are  not  my  God. 

Nor  aught  in   heaven  ;    for,  angels,    say, 

And   saints   escaped    earth's  guilt  and   sadnefs, 

What  makes  your  everlafting  day  ? 

What  tunes  your  harps  to  joy  and  gladnefs  ? 

O  !   there  is  nought  in  yon  bright  fky 
Worthy  this   worthlefs  heart  to  own  ; 

On  earth  there  's  nought ;   friends,  creatures,   fly  ; 
I  pant,  my  God,  for  thee  alone. 


2  22 


God. 


IN   A    DARK    NIGHT. 

WHAT  though  the  comforts  of  the  light 
This  gloomy  night  denies  ; 
Though   me  to  trouble  and  affright, 

Unwelcome  darknefs  tries. 
What  ftiould  I  doubt  ?   whom  fhould  I   fear  ? 

Or  why  difhearten'd   be  ; 
Since  thou,   O   God  !   art  ev'rywhere. 
And   present   ftill  with  me. 

What  mischiefs  hath  a  midnight  hour 

My   terror  to  procure  ? 
What  warrant  hath  a  noontide  power 

My  safety  to  afTure  ? 
I  find  no  comforts  in  the  day, 

If  thou  thy  presence  hid'ft  ; 
Nor  can  the  darknefs  me  dismay, 

If  near  me  thou  abid'ft. 


Indeed  the  fiend  that  hates  the  light. 

Doth  oft  occafion  take. 
Amid  the  darknefs  of  the  night. 

These  bugbear  fhows  to  make  : 
Yet  sure  the  darknefs  of  our  minds. 

Is  that  whereby  this  foe 


God.  223 

Moll:   frequently  occafion   finds 
The  greateft  harms  to  do. 

Me  from  that  darknefs  to  defend, 

Thy  grace,   O   Lord  !  afFord  ; 
To  me  th'   enlightening  Spirit  lend. 

And   lantern  of  thy  word. 
For  then  though  Egypt's  darknefs    had 

Inclosed   me  round  about  ; 
Yea,  though   I   sat  in   death's  black  fhade, 

That  light  fhould   guide   me  out. 

George  Wither. 


I   COR.  3:  22. 

IF   God  is   mine,  then  present  things 
And   things   to  come   are   mine  ; 
Yea,  Chrifl,   his  word,  and  spirit  too. 
And  glory  all  divine. 

If  He  is   mine,  then   from   his  love 

He   every  trouble   sends  \ 
All  things  are  working  for  my  good, 

And   blifs   his   rod   attends. 

If  He  is   mine,  I  need  not  fear 
The   rage  of  earth   and   hell  5 

He  will   support  my   feeble   power. 
Their  utmoft   force  repel. 


224  God. 

If  He  is   mine,  let   friends   forsake, 
Let  wealth  and   honor  flee  ; 

Sure  he  who  giveth   me  himself 
Is  more  than  these  to  me. 

If  He  is  mine,   I  '11  boldly  pafs 

Through   death's   myfterious   vale  ; 
He  is  a  solid  comfort  when 
All  other  comforts   fail. 

Oh  !   tell  me,  Lord,  that  thou  art  mine 

What  can   I  wifh  befide  ? 
My  soul  fhall  at  the  fountain  live, 

When  all  the  ftreams  are  dried. 


WHEN,  before,  my  God  commanded 
Anything  he  would  have  done, 
I  was  close  and  gripple-handed. 
Made  an  end  ere  I   begun. 

If  he  thought  it  fit  to  lay 
Judgments  on   me,   I   could  say. 
They  are  good  ;  but  fhrink  away. 

But  the  case  is  alter'd  now  : 

He  no  sooner  turns  his  eye. 
But  I  quickly  bend,  and  bow, 

Ready  at  his  feet  to  lie  : 


God.  225 

Love  hath  taught  me   to  obey 
All  his  precepts,  and  to  say, 
Not  to-morrow,  but  to-day. 

What  he  wills,   I    say  I   muft  : 
What  I   mull,  I  say   I   will  : 
He  commanding,  it  is  juft 

What  he  would,  I   (hould   fulfil. 

Whilft  he  biddeth,   I   believe 
What   he  calls   for  he  will  give  : 
To  obey   him,   is  to  live. 

His  commandments  grievous  are  not, 

Longer  than   men   think  them   so  : 
Though  he  send   me   forth,  I  care  not, 
Whilft   he  gives   me   ftrength   to  go  ; 
When  or  whither,  all  is  one  ; 
On  his  bus'nefs,  not  mine  own, 
I   fhall  never  go  alone. 

If  I  be  complete  in  him. 

And   in  him  all  fullnefs  dwelleth, 
I  am  sure  aloft  to  swim, 

Whilft  that  Ocean  overswelleth. 

Having  Him  that's  all  in  all, 

I  am  confident  I  fhall 

Nothing  want,  for  which  I   call. 

Francis  Quarks. 
15 


226 


God. 


OMNIPRESENCE    OF   GOD. 

OTHOU  by  long  experience  tried, 
Near  whom  no  grief  can   long  abide  ; 
My  Lord,  how  full  of  sweet  content, 
I  pjfs  my  years  of  banifhment. 

All  scenes  alike  engaging  prove, 
To  souls  imprefled  with  sacred  love  ! 
Where'er  they  dwell,  they  dwell  in  Thee, 
In  heaven,  in  earth,  or  on  the  sea. 


To  me  remains  nor  place  nor  time. 
My  country  is  in  every  clime  : 
I  can  be  calm  and   free  from  care 
On  any   fliore,   fince  God   is  there. 

While  place  we  seek,  or  place  we  fhun. 
The  soul  finds  happinefs  in  none  ; 
But  with  my  God  to  guide  my  way, 
'T  is  equal  joy  to  go  or  ftay. 

Could  I  be  caft  where  Thou  art  not. 
That  were  indeed  a  dreadful  thought  : 
But  regions  none  remote   I  call. 
Secure  of  finding  God   in  all. 

Madame  Guy  on. 


God. 


227 


GOD   WITH   ME. 

"  When  thou  pafleft  through  the  waters,  I  will  be  with  thee  ;  and  through 
the  rivers,  they  fliall  not  overflow  thee  :  when  thou  walkeft  through 
the  fire,  thou  (halt  not  be  burned  ;  neither  fliall  the  flame  kindle 
upon  thee."  —  Isa.  43  :   2. 

MY  God  with   me  in  every  place  ! 
Firmly  does  the  promise  ftand, 
On  land  or  sea,  with  present  grace 
Still  to  aid  us  near  at  hand. 
If  you   alTc,  "  Who  is  with  thee  ?  " 
God  is  here  —  my  God  with  me  ! 


No  depth,  nor  prison,  nor  the  grave, 
Can  exclude  him  from  his  own  ; 

His  cheering  presence  ftill  I   have, 
If  in  crowds  or  all  alone. 
In   whatever  ftate  I  be. 
Everywhere  is  God  with  me  ! 

My  God  for  me!  I  dare  to  say  — 
God  the  portion  of  my  soul ! 

Nor  need   I  tremble  in  dismay 
When  around   me  troubles  roll. 
If  you  afk,  "  What  comforts  thee  ?  " 
It  is  this  —  God  is  for  me  ! 


228 


God. 


In  life,  in  death,  with   God  so  near. 

Every  battle  I   fhall  win. 
Shall  boldly  prefs   through  dangers  here, 

Triumph  over  every  fin  ! 

"  What !  "  you  say,  "  a  viftor  be  ?  " 

No,  not  I,  but  God   in  me  ! 

C.  F.  Zeller. 


— vC^^CO*?)-.*'- 


SONNET. 


WITHOUT  the  smile  of  God  upon  the  soul. 
We  see  not,  and  the  world  has  loft  its  light  ; 
For  us  there  is  no  quiet  in  the  night, 
No  beauty  in  the  ftars.     The  safFron  ftole 
Of  morning,  or  the  pomp  of  evening's  goal, 
That  celebrates  Day's  marriage  with  the  Sea, — 
Blue  diftance,  filver  lake,  hill,  glen,  and  tree, — 
Are  sealed  unto  the  spirit  like  a  scroll 
Writ  in  a  perifhed  language.      But  a  ray 
Upon  this  darknefs  suddenly  may  dart. 
And  Chrift's  dear  love  be   poured   into  the  heart. 
To  clothe  Creation  in   a  robe  of  day. 
Then  doth  the   morning  cheer,  the  night  hath  calm. 
And  fkies  a  glory,  and  the  dews  a  balm. 

Towmend. 


God.  229 


HYMN   OF   A    HERMIT. 

THOU,  Lord,  who  rear'ft  the  mountains'  height. 
And  mak'ft  the  cliff"  with  sunftiine  bright, 
Oh  grant   that   I   may  own  thy   hand, 
No  lefs  in  every  grain  of  sand ! 

With   forefts   huge  of  datelefs   time, 
Thy  will  hath   hung  each   pealc  sublime  ; 
But  withered  leaves  beneath  a  tree 
Have  tono;ues  that  tell  as  loud  of    Thee. 

While  clouds  to  clouds  through   ages  call. 
Thou  pour'ft  the  thundering  waterfall  ; 
But  every  filent  drop  of  dew 
Reflects  thy  ordered  world   to  view. 

In  all   the   immense,   the   ftrange,   the  old. 
Thy   presence  carelefs   men   behold  ; 
In  all  the  little,  weak,  and   mean. 
By  faith  be  thou  as  clearly  seen. 

Teach,  Thou  !   that  not  a  leaf  can  grow 
Till  life   from   thee   within   it   flow  ; 
That  not  a  speck  of  duft   can   be, 
O   Fount  of  Being  !    save  by   thee. 


230  God. 

Inftru£l  my  soul,  by  fhows   diftraught, 
Too  vaft  and  loud   for  peaceful  thought, 
That  every  quiet  mote  and  gleam 
With   Thee,  to  mufing  spirits,  beam. 

Inspire  me,  Thou,  in  every  glance 
Of  all  our  dreams  confuse  as  chance, 
In  every  change  of  mortal  things. 
To   see  a  power  from  thee  that  springs. 

In  everv  human  word  and  deed. 
Each   flafli   of  feeling,  will,  or  creed. 
To  know  a  plan  ordained   above, 
Begun  and  ending  all  in  love. 

So  smalleft  bubbles  here  on  earth 
With   me  fhall  claim  a  heavenly  birth. 
And  each   faint  atom   paffing  by 
Seem   bright  with   thine  eternal  eye. 

So  beft  we  learn   what  light  sublime 
Is  hid  within  the  clouds  of  time, 
Whose  darlcnefs,  dreadful  though  it  be. 
From   those  who  seek  conceals  not  Thee. 

Sterlino-. 


God. 


231 


MY    FATHER    IS   THE   MIGHTY    LORD. 

MY   Father  is  the  mighty  Lord,  whose  arm 
Spans  earth    and  flcy,   and   fhields    his    child    from 
harm, 
Whose  ftill,  small   voice  of  love  is  yet  the  same 
As  once  from   Horeb's  fiery  mount  it  came  ; 
Whose  glorious  works  the  ang-el-choirs  declare  ; 
He  hears  their  praise,  and  hearkens  to  my  prayer. 

My  King  is  God's  eternal,  holy  Son, 

And  he   anoints  me  as  a  chosen  one  ; 

He  has  redeemed   me  with  his  precious  blood. 

And  for  unnumber'd  debts  has  surety  ftood  ; 

He  fought  the  foe,  and  drew  me  by  his  hand. 

Out  from  his  camp,  into  his  Father's  land. 

'^'bj  brotherhood  's  a  circle,  flretching  wide 
Around  one  fount,  although  a  sea  divide; 
With  fathers,  who  behold  the  Lord  in   light. 
With  saints  unborn,  who  fhall   adore  his  might 
With  brothers,  who  the  race  of  faith  now  run. 
In   union  and  communion,  I  am  one  ! 


My  journey's  end  lies  upward  and  afar  ; 
It  glimmers  bright,  but  vaguely  as  a  ftar  ; 


232  God. 

And  oft  as  faith  has  caught  some  glimpse  serene, 
So  often  clouds  and   mifts  obscure  the   scene  ; 
Yet,  in   this  longing  ends  each  vifion  dim  — 
To  see  my  Lord,  and  to  be  made  like  him  ! 

My  grave,  so  long  a  dark  and  drear   abyfs, 
Is  now  scarce  noticed  on   the   way   to  blifs  ; 
Once  at  the  gates   of  Hell  it  yawning  lay. 
Now   ftands  as   portal  to  the  land  of  day  ; 
It  takes   me  to  the   Father's   home  so   bleft  ; 
It  brings  me  to  the   feaft,  a  welcome  gueft. 

Lange. 

THE    FATHER,    REDEEMER,  GUIDE. 

O  FATHER-EYE,  that  hath   so  truly  watch'd, 
O   Father-hand,   that  hath   so  gently  led, 
O   Father-heart,  that  by   my  prayer  is   touch'd, 

That  loved   me   firft   when   I   was   cold   and  dead : 
Still  do  thou  lead   me  on  with   faithful  care 

The  narrow  path   to  heaven   where   I   would  go. 
And  train   me  for  the  life  that  waits   me  there, 

Alike  through  love  and  lofs,  through   weal  and  wo. 

O   my    Redeemer,  who  for  me  waft  flain. 
Who  bringeft   me  forgivenefs  and  release. 

Whose  death   has  ransom'd   me  to  God  again. 
That  now   my  heart  can  reft  in  perfe6l  peace; 


God. 


233 


Still  more  and   more  do  thou  my   soul  redeem, 
From  every  bondage  set   me  wholly   free, 

Though   Evil  oft  the  mightieft  power  may  seem, 
Still   make  me  more  than   conqueror,  Lord,  in  thee. 

O   Holy  Spirit,  who  with  gentlelT:   breath 

Dolt  teach  to   pray,  doft  comfort  or  reprove, 
Who   giveft   us  all  joy   and    hope  and   faith. 

Through   whom    we  live  at   peace  with   God    in   love  ; 
Still  do  thou   fhed   thine  influences   abroad. 

Let  me  the  Father's  image  ever  wear, 
Make  me  a   holy   temple  of  my   God, 

Where  dwells  forever  calm  adoring   prayer  ! 

Spina. 


FOR    THE    SABBATH    MORNING. 

LIGHT  of  light  enlighten   me 
Now  anew   the   day   is  dawning  j 
Sun  of  grace,  the  fhadows   flee. 

Brighten   thou   my   Sabbath    morning, 
With   Thy  joyous   sunfhine  bleft 
Happy  is  my  day  of  reft  ! 


Fount  of  all  our  joy  and  peace. 
To  Thy   living  waters  lead   me. 

Thou  from  earth   my  soul  release 

And  with   grace  and    mercy  feed   me  ; 


234  God. 

Blefs   thy  word  that  it   may  prove 
Rich   in   fruits  that  thou  doft  love. 

Kindle  Thou   the  sacrifice 
That  upon   my   lips   is  lying  ; 

Clear  the  fhadou^s   from  mine  eyes 
That,   from  every   error  flying, 

No  ftrange   fire  within  me  glow 
That  Thine  altar  doth  not  know. 


Let  me  with  my  heart  to-day, 

Holy,   Holy,   Holy,  finging, 
Rapt  awhile  from  earth   away 

All   my  soul  to   thee   upspringing. 
Have  a  foretafle  inly  given 
How  they  worfhip  thee  in   Heaven. 

Reft  in  me  and   I  in  thee. 
Build  a   Paradise  within   me  ; 

Oh  reveal  thyself  to  me, 

Blefled   Love,   who  diedft  to  win   me  ; 

Fed  from  thine  exhauftlefs  urn. 

Pure  and  bright  my  lamp  fhall  burn. 

Hence  all  care,  all   vanity, 
For  the  day  to  God  is  holy  ; 

Come  thou  glorious  majefty 

Deign  to  fill  this  temple  lowly  ; 

Nought  to-dav  my  soul   fhall   move, 

Simply  refting  in  thy  love. 

B.  Schmolck. 


'73' 


Death. 


235 


DEATH 


A    LITTLE    WHILE. 

BEYOND   the  smiling  and  the  weeping, 
I   {hall  be  soon  ; 
Beyond  the  waking  and   the   fleeping, 
Beyond  the  sowing  and  the  reaping, 
I  fhall  be  soon. 
Love,  reft,  and  home  ! 
Sweet  home  ! 
Lord,  tarry  not,  but  come. 


Beyond  the  blooming  and  the  fading, 

I  fhall  be  soon  ; 
Beyond  the  fhining  and  the  fhading. 
Beyond  the  hoping  and  the  dreading, 
I   fhall  be  soon. 
Love,  reft,  and  home! 
Sweet   home ! 
Lord,   tarry  not,  but  come. 


236 


Death. 


Beyond  the  rifing  and  the  setting, 

I   fhall  be  soon  ; 
Beyond  the  calming  and  the  fretting, 
Beyond  remembering  and  forgetting, 
I   {hall  be  soon. 
Love,  reit,  and   home  ! 
Sweet  home  I 
Lord,  tarry  not,  but  come. 

Beyond  the  parting  and  the  meeting, 

I   fhall  be   soon  ; 
Beyond  the  farewell  and  the  greeting, 
Beyond  the  pulse's  fever  beating, 
I   (hall  be  soon. 
Love,  reft,  and  home  ! 
Sweet   home  ! 
Lord,  tarry  not,  but  come. 


Beyond  the   froft-chain  and  the  fever, 

I    fhall   be  soon  ; 
Beyond  the  rock-wafte   and   the   river. 
Beyond  the  ever  and  the  never 
I    fhall   be  soon. 
Love,  reft,  and   home  ! 
Sweet  home  ! 
Lord,  tarry  not,  but  come. 

Rev.  Dr. 


Bo 


Death. 


237 


A    LITTLE   LONGER. 

A  LITTLE  longer  yet,   a  little  longer, 
Shall  violets  bloom  for  thee  and  sweet  birds  Ting, 
And  the  lime  branches,  where  soft  winds  are  blowing, 
Shall   murmur  the   sweet  promise  of  the   spring. 

A  little  longer  yet,  a  little  longer. 

Thou   fhalt  behold   the  quiet  of  the   morn. 

While  tender  grafles  and  awakening  flowers, 
Send  up  a  golden  tint  to  greet  the   dawn. 

A  little  longer  yet,   a  little  longer. 

The   tendernefs  of  twilight  fhall  be   thine, 

The  rosy  clouds  that  float  o'er  dying  daylight, 
Nor  fade  till   tremblino-  ftars  beo-in   to  fhine. 

A   little  longer  yet,  a  little  longer. 

Shall  ftarry  night  be   beautiful   for  thee. 
And  the  cold   moon  fliall  look  through  the  blue  filence, 

Flooding  her  filver  path  upon  the  sea. 


A  little  longer  yet,  a  little  longer, 

Life  fhall  be  thine  —  life  with  its  power  to  will, 
Life   with    its   flrength   to  bear,  to  love,   to  conquer, 

Bringing  its   thousand  joys  thy   heart  to   fill. 


238 


Death. 


A   little  longer  yet,  a  little  longer, 

The   voices   thou  haft  loved   fhall  charm   thine  ear  ; 
And  thy  true  heart  that  now^  beats  quick   to   hear  them 

A  little   longer  yet,  fhall  hold  them  dear. 

A  little  longer  yet,  joy  while  thou  mayft  ; 

Love  and  rejoice,   for  time  has  nought  in   ftore  ; 
And  soon  the  darknefs  of  the  grave   fhall  bid  thee 

Love  and  rejoice,  and   feel  and   know  no  more. 

A  little  longer  ftill  —  patience,   beloved: 

A  little  longer  ftill,  ere  heaven  unroll 
The  glory,  and  the  brightnefs,  and  the  wonder, 

Eternal  and  divine  that  waits  thy  soul. 

A  little  longer  ere  life,  true,   immortal, 

(Not  this  our  fhadowy  life)  will  be  thine  own, 

And  thou  fhalt  ftand  where  winged  archangels  worfhip, 
And  trembling  bow  before  the  Great  White  Throne. 


A  little  longer  ftill,  and   heaven  awaits  thee, 
And  fills  thy  spirit  with  a  great  delight  ; 

Then  our  pale  joys  will  seem  a  dream   forgotten, 
Our  sun  a  darknefs,  and  our  day  a  night. 

A  little   longer,  and  thy  heart,  beloved. 
Shall  beat  forever  with  a  love  divine  ; 

And  joy   so  pure,  so  mighty,  so  eternal, 

No  mortal   knows,  and  lives,  fhall  then  be  thine. 


Death.  239 

A  little  longer  yet,  and  angel  voices 

Shall  fing  in   heavenly  chant  upon  thine  ear  ; 

Angels  and  saints  await  thee,  and  God  needs  thee  ; 
Beloved,  can  we  bid   thee  linger  here? 

Chrijiian  Regijier. 


DEATH. 


WHEN  Thou  (halt  please  this  soul  to  enthrone 
Above  impure  corruption, 
What  fhould  I  grieve  or  feare. 
To  think  this  breathleffe  body  muft 
Become  a  loathsome  heape  of  duft, 
And  ne'er  again   appeare  ? 

For  in  the  fire  where  ore  is  tryed, 
And  by  that  torment  purified. 

Doe  we  deplore  the  lofle  ? 
And,  when   Thou   fhalt   my  soul   refine. 
That  it  thereby  may  purer  fhine. 

Shall  I  grieve  for  the  drofle  ? 

Habington. 


240  Death. 


MORTALITY. 
"  And  we  shall  be  changed." 

YE  dainty  mofles,  lichens  gray, 
PrefT'd  each  to  each  in  tender   fold, 
And  peacefully  thus,  day  by  day, 
Returning  to  their  mould  j 

Brown  leaves,  that  with  aerial  grace 

Slip  from  your  branch  like  birds   a-wing, 

Each  leaving  in  the  appointed  place 
Its  bud  of  future  Spring ; 

If  we,  God's  conscious  creatures,  knew 
But  half  your  faith   in  our  decay, 

We  fhould  not  tremble  as  we  do 
When  summon'd  clay  to  clay. 

But  with  an  equal  patience  sweet 
We  fhould  put  off  this  mortal  gear. 

In  whatsoe'er  new  form  is  meet 
Content  to  reappear. 

Knowing  each   germ  of  life  He  gives 
Muft  have  in    Him  its  source  and  rise. 


Death.  241 

Being  that  of  His  being  lives 
May  change,  but  never  dies. 

Ye  dead  leaves,  dropping  soft  and    flow, 

Ye  moffes  green  and  lichens   fair, 
Go  to  your  graves,  as  I  will  go, 

For  God  is  also  there. 

Mifs  Muloch. 

— ^Fae9«'  - 


DEATH. 

THERE  are  who  fear  thy  summons,  Death  ! 
And  all  thy  pale  and   cold  array  ; 
The  young,  w\\o  with  rejoicing  breath, 
Are  opening  on  life's  sunny  day. 

Yes  !   all  to  them   seems  frefli  and  sweet  ; 

And  as  they  gaze,  with  raptured  eye. 
On  all  the  beautiful  they  meet. 

They  feel  it  would  be  pain  to  die. 

There  are  to  whom  thy  call  would  come, 

As  to  the  exile's  weary  heart 
Would  be  the  summons  to  his  home  ; 

That  home  from  which   he  wept  to  part. 

There  are,  who,  worn  with  cares  and  tears. 
Look  on  thee  as  the  blefTed  one, 
16 


242  Death. 

Whose  hand  fhall  close  their  mortal  years, 
Before  their  faith  and  truft  be  gone. 

And,  Death  !   there  are  who  look  to  thee, 

But  as  the  minifter  of  grace, 
And  who  thy  dark  approach  can  see 

With  smiles,   for  they  have  won  the  race. 

The  good,  the  bleft  !  to  thee  they  truft 

To  crown  them  with  the  immortal  wreath  ; 

And  fearlefs  of  the  dreams  of  duft. 

As  conquerors  welcome  thee,  O  Death  ! 

RISING   TO   GOD. 

NOW  let  our  souls  on  wings   sublime. 
Rise  from  the  vanities  of  time  ; 
Draw  back  the  parting  veil,  and  see 
The  glories  of  eternity. 

Born  by  a  new  celeftial  birth. 

Why  fhould  we  grovel  here  on  earth  ? 

Why  grasp  at  tranfitory   toys. 

So  near  to  heaven's  eternal  joys  ? 

Shall  aught  beguile  us  on  the  road. 
When  we  are  walking  back  to  God  ; 


Death.  243 

For  ftrangers  unto  life  we  come, 
And  dying  is  but  going  home. 

Welcome  sweet  hour  of  full  discharge, 
That  sets  our  longing   souls  at  large, 

Unbinds  our  chains,   breaks  up  our  cell, 
And  gives   us  with  our  God  to  dwell. 

To  dwell  with   God,  to  feel  his  love. 

Is   the   full   heaven   enjoyed   above  ; 
And    the   sweet  expeilation   now, 

Is  the  young  dawn  of  heaven  below. 

Gibbons. 


MY   GOD!    I   KNOW   THAT    I    MUST   DIE. 
Job  14:   II,  12. 

MY   God  !   I  know   that  I   muft  die, 
My  mortal  life  is  pafling  hence  ; 
On  earth   I  neither  hope  nor  try 

To  find  a  lafting  refidence  ; 
Then  teach  me  by  thy  heavenly  grace, 
With  joy  and  peace  my  death  to  face. 

My  God  !  I   know  not  when  I  die. 
What  is  the  moment  or  the  hour, — 


244  Death. 

How  soon  the  clay  may  broken  lie, 

How  quickly  pafs  away  the  flower  ; 
Then  may  thy  child  prepared  be 
Through  time  to  meet  Eternity. 

My  God !  I   know  not  how  I  die, 

For  death  has  many  ways  to  come,  — 

In  dark  myfterious  agony, 

Or  gently  as  a  fleep  to  some. 

Juft  as  thou  wilt !    if  but  it  be 

Forever  blefled.   Lord,  with  thee. 

My  God !  I   know  not  where  I  die. 

Where  is  my  grave,  beneath  what  ftrand. 

Yet   from  its  gloom   I  do  rely 
To  be  delivered  by  thy  hand. 

Content,   I  take  what  spot  is  mine, 

Since  all  the  earth,   my  Lord,  is  thine. 

My  gracious  God!  when   I  muft  die, 
Oh  !  bear  my  happy  soul  above, 

With  Chrift,  my  Lord,  eternally 
To  fhare  thy  glory  and  thy  love  ! 

Then  comes  it  right  and  well  to  me. 

When,  where,  and  how  my  death  {hall  be. 

B.  Schmolk. 


Death. 


245 


TO  DIE   IS  GAIN. 

WHY  longed  Paul  to  be  diiTolv'd, 
And  enter  into  reft  I 
The  queftion  here  he  hath  resolv'd, — 
To  be  with   Chrift  is  beft. 

And  I,  like  Paul,  defire  to  die, 

I  long  for  death's  arreft  ; 
If  any  afk  the  reason  why,  — 

To  be  with  Chrift  is   beft. 

My  unbelief,  that  bosom  foe. 
Which  lurks  within  my  breaft. 

So  often  seeks   my  overthrow,  — 
To  be  with  Chrift  is  beft. 

Should  friends   and  kindred  on  me  frown, 

And  leave  my  soul  oppreft  ; 
Should  evils  crufh  my  comforts  down,  — 

To  be  with  Chrift  is  beft. 


Had  I  a  voice  so  loud  and  ftrong, 
To  sound  from  eaft  to  weft  ; 

I  'd  tell  the  honor'd  seeking  throng. 
To  be  with   Chrift  is  beft. 


246  Death. 

0  come,  sweet  Jesus,   quickly  come, 
And  cheer  my  fainting  breaft  ; 

1  long  to  reach   my  heavenly  home, — 
To  be  with  Chrift  is  heft. 

Pinion'd   with  love,  I  'd  take  the  wing. 

And  fly  to  thee,  my  reft  : 
There  with   the  Church  triumphant  fing. 

To  be   with  Chrift  is  beft. 

DobeWs  ColleSiion. 

PARTING. 

WHAT  mean  ye  by  this  wailing, 
To  break  my  bleeding  heart  ? 
As  if  the  love  that  binds  us 

Could  alter  or  depart  ! 
Our  sweet  and  holy  union 

Knows   neither  time   nor  place  ; 
The  love   that  God  has   planted 
Is  lafting  as   His  grace. 

Ye  clasp  these  hands  at  parting, 

As  if  no  hope  could  be  ; 
While  ftill  we  ftand   forever 

In  blefled   unity  ! 
Ye  gaze,  as  on  a  vifion. 

Ye  never  could  recall, 


Death. 

While  ftill  each  thought  is  with  you, 
And  Jesus  with   us  all ! 

Ye  say,  "  We  here,  thou  yonder, 

Thou  goeil,  and  we  ftay  !  " 
And  yet  Chrift's  myftic  body 

Is  one  eternally. 
Ye  speak  of  different  journevs, 

A  long;  and  sad  adieu  ! 
While   ftill  one   way   I    travel, 

And   have   one   end    with   you  ! 

Why  fhould  ye  now  be  weeping 

These  agonizing  tears  ? 
Behold  our  gracious  Leader, 

And  caft  away  your  fears. 
We  tread  one  path  to  glory. 

Are  guided  by  one  hand. 
And  led  in  faith  and  patience 

Unto  one  Fatherland  ! 


247 


Then   let  this   hour  of  parting 

No  bitter  grief  record. 
But  be  an   hour  of  union 

More  blefled   with  our  Lord  ! 
With   Him   to  guide  and  save  ui>. 

No  changes   that   await, 
No  earthly  separations 

Can  leave  us  desolate  ! 


Spitta. 


248  Death. 


SOUL'S  joy,  now  I  am  gone, 
And  you  alone, 
(Which  cannot  be. 
Since  I  muft  leave  myself  with  thee. 
And  carry  thee  with  me,) 
Yet  when   unto  our  eyes 
Absence  denies 
Each   other's  fight. 
And  makes  to  us  a  conftant  night 
When  others  change  to  light : 
O  give  no  way  to  grief. 
But  let  belief 
Of  mutual  love. 
This  wonder  to  the  vulgar  prove. 
Our  bodies,  not  we,  move. 

Let  not  thy  wit  beweep 

Words,  but  sense   deep  ; 
For  when  we  mifs 
By  diftance,  our  hopes-joining  blifs, 

Ev'n  then  our  souls   fhall  kifs  : 
Fools  have  no  means  to  meet, 
But  by  their   feet  ; 
Why  fhould  our  clay 
Over  our  spirits   so  much  sway. 
To  tie  us  to  that  way  ? 


Death. 


249 


O   give  no   way  to  grief, 
But  let  belief 
Of  mutual   love, 
This  wonder  to  the  vulgar  prove, 
Our  bodies,  not  we,  move. 

Dr.  Donne. 

A    VALEDICTION   FORBIDDING   MOURNING. 

AS  virtuous  men  pafs  mildly  away. 
And   whisper  to  their  souls  to  go, 
Whilft  some  of  their  sad   friends,  do  say. 
The  breath  goes  now,  and  some  say  no  ; 

So  let  us  melt,  and   make  no  noise. 

No  tear-floods,  nur  figh-tempefls  move, 

'T  were  profanation  of  our  joys. 
To  tell  the  laity  our  love. 


Moving  of  the  earth  brings   harms  and  fears. 
Men  reckon  what  it  did  and  meant ; 

But  trepidation  of  the  spheres. 
Though   greater  far,  is  innocent. 

Dull   sublunary   Lovers'  love 

(Whose  soul  is  sense)   cannot  admit 

Absence,  because  it  doth   remove 
Those  things  which   elemented  it. 


250  Death. 

But  we  by  a  love  so  much  refined, 
That  ourselves  know  not   what  it  is, 

Inter-affured  of  the   mind, 

Carelefs  eyes,  lips,  and   hands  to  mifs. 

Our  two  souls,  therefore,  which  are  one. 
Though   I   mufi:  go,  endure  not  yet 

A  breach,  but  an  expanfion. 
Like  gold  to  airy  thinnefs  beat. 

If  they  be  two,  they  are  two  so 
As  ftiff  twin  compafles  are  two  ; 

Thy  soul,  the   fixt  foot,  makes  no  show 
To  move,  but  doth   if  the  other  do. 

And  though   it  in  the  centre  fit, 

Yet  when  the  other  far  doth   roam, 

It  leans  and  hearkens  after  it. 

And  grows  ere6t,  as  that  comes  home 

Such  wilt  thou  be  to  me,  who  muft, 
Like  the  other  foot,  obliquely  run  : 

Thy  firmnefs  makes   my  circle  juft. 
And   makes   me  end  where  I   begun. 

Dr.  Donne. 


Death.  25 1 


THE   FAMILY    IN    HEAVEN    AND    EARTH. 

TT^IS  but  one  family, — the   sound  is  balm, 
A    A   seraph-whisper  to  the  wounded  heart. 
It  lulls  the   ftorm  of  sorrow  to  a  calm, 
And  draws  the   venom   from  the  avenger's   dart. 

'T  is   but  one   family,  —  the  accents   come 

Like  light  from  heaven  to  break  the  night  of  woe, 

The  banner-cry,   to  call  the  spirit  home. 

The  fhout  of  victory  o'er  a  fallen  foe. 

Death  cannot  separate  —  is  memory  dead? 

Has  thought,  too,  vanifhed,  and  has  love  grown  chill  ? 

Has  every  relic  and   memento  fled. 

And  are  the  living  only  with   us  fl-ill  ? 

No  !   in   our  hearts  the  loft  we  mourn   remain, 

Objedls  of  love  and  ever-frefh  delight ; 

And  fancy  leads  them  in  her  fairy  train. 

In  half-seen  transports  paft  the  mourner's  Tight. 

Yes  !  in  ten  thousand  ways,  or  far  or  near. 
The  called  by  love,  by  meditation  brought. 
In  heavenly  vifions  yet  they  haunt  us  here. 
The   sad   companions  of  our  sweeteft   thought. 


252 


Death. 


Death  never  separates  ;   the  golden  wires 
That  ever  trembled  to  their  names  before, 
Will   vibrate  ftill,  though  every  form  expires, 
And  those  we  love,  we  look  upon  no  more. 

No  more  indeed  in  sorrow  and  in  pain. 
But  even   memory's  need  ere  long  will  cease, 
For  we  fhall  join  the  loft  of  love  again, 
In  endlefs  bands,  and  in  eternal  peace. 

Edmejion. 


A   GERMAN    FUNERAL   HYMN. 

"  Here  we  have  no  continuing  city,  but  we  seek  one  to  come. 
Heb.  13  :   14. 

Wohlauf!  wohlan!  zum  letzten  Sang, 
Kurz  ift  der  Weg,  die  Ruhe  ift  lang. 

COME   forth  !  come  on,  with  solemn   song  ! 
The  road  is  fhort,  the  reft  is  long  ; 
The  Lord  brought  here,  he  calls  away  ! 

Make  no  delay. 
This  home  was  for  a  pafling  day. 


Here  in  an  inn  a  ftranger  dwelt ; 
Here  joy  and  grief  by  turns   he   felt  ; 


Death.  253 

Poor  dwelling,  now  we  close  thy  door  ! 

The  tafk  is  o'er, 
The  sojourner  returns  no  more. 

Now  of  a  lafting  home   pofTcfled, 
He  goes  to  seek  a  deeper  reft ; 
Good  night  !  the  day  was  sultry   here, 

In  toil  and  fear, 
Good  night !   the  night  is  cool  and  clear. 

Chime  on,  ye  bells  !  again  begin, 
And  ring  the  Sabbath  morning  in  ; 
The  laborer's  week-day  work  is  done. 

The  reft  begun, 
Which  Chrift  has  for  his   people  won  ! 

Now  open  to  us,  gates  of  peace  ! 
Here  let  the  pilgrim's  journey  cease, 
Ye  quiet  flumberers  make  room 

In  your  ftill  home, 
For  the  new  ftranger  who  has  come  ! 

How  many  graves  around  us  lie  ! 
How  many  homes  are  in  the  fky! 
Yes,  for  each   saint  doth   Chrift  prepare 

A   place  with  care  : 
Thy  home  is  waiting,  brother,  there! 

Jesus,  thou  reigneft    Lord  alone  ; 
Thou  wilt  return  and  claim   thine  own  ; 


254  Death. 

Come  quickly,   Lord  !   return  again  ! 

Amen  !  Amen  ! 
Thine  seal  us  ever,  now  and  then  ! 

F.  Sachse. 


THE    CHRISTIAN'S    DEATH. 

LIFT  not  thou  the  wailing  voice. 
Weep  not,  't  is  a  Chriftian  dieth,  — 
Up,  where   blefled  saints  rejoice, 

Ransomed   now,  the  spirit  flieth  ; 
High,  in   heaven's  own  light,  fhe  dwelleth. 
Full  the  song  of  triumph  swelleth  ; 
Freed   from  earth,  and  earthly  failing, 
Lift  for  her  no  voice  of  wailing ! 

Pour  not  thou  the  bitter  tear  ; 

Heaven  its  book  of  comfort  opeth  : 
Bids  thee  sorrow  not,  nor  fear. 

But,  as  one  who  always  hopeth. 
Humbly   here  in   faith  relying, 
Peacefully  in  Jesus  dying, 
Heavenly  joy   her  eye  is  flufhing, — 
Why  fhould  thine  with   tears  be  gufhing  ? 

They  who  die  in  Chrift  are  blefled, — 
Ours  be,  then,  no  thought  of  grieving  ! 


Death. 


255 


Sweetly  with  their  God   they   reft, 

All  their  toils  and  troubles  leaving  : 
So   be  ours  the   faith   that  saveth, 
Hope  that  every  trial  leaveth, 
Love  that  to  the  end  endureth, 
And,  through  Chrift,  the  crown  secureth  ! 

G.  JV.  Doane. 


ON    THE    DEATH    OF    AN    INFANT. 

SWEET   babe,   fhe  glanced   into  our  world   to   see 
A  sample  of  our  misery. 
Then  turned  away  her  languid  eye 
To  drop  a  tear  or  two  and  die. 
Sweet  babe,  Ihe   tailed  of  life's  bitter  cup, 
Refused  to  drink  the   potion   up  ! 
But   turned   her  little   head  afide, 
Disgufted  with   the   tafte,  and  died. 
Sweet  babe,  fhe  liftened  for  awhile  to   hear 
Our   mortal  griefs,  then  turned   her  ear 
To  angels'   harps  and  songs,  and  cried 
To  join  their  notes  celeftial,  fighed,  and  died. 


Sweet   babe,  no   more,  but  seraph  now, 
Before  the  throne  behold  her  bow, 
To   heavenly  joys   her  spirit   flies, 
Bleft  in   the  triumph  of  the  (kies, 


256 


Death. 


Adores  the  grace  that  brought  her  there 
Without  a  wifh,  —  without  a  care,  — 
That   wafhed  her  soul  in  Calvary's  ftream, 
That  fhortened  life's  diftreffing  dream. 
Short  pain,  —  fhort  grief,  —  dear  babe,  was  thine. 
Now  joys  eternal  and  divine. 

Yes,  thou  art  fled,  and  saints  a  welcome  fing. 
Thine  infant  spirit  soars  on  angels'  wing  : 
Our  dark  afFedlion  fhouid   have  hoped  thy  ftay. 
The  voice  of  God   has  called   His   child  away. 
Like  Samuel,  early  in   the  temple  found. 
Sweet   rose   of  Sharon,   plant  of  holy  ground. 
Oh!   more  than  Samuel  bleft,  to  thee   'tis  given. 
The  God   he  served  on  earth,   to  serve  in  heaven. 

Cunningham. 

DEATH. 

O  THINK  that,  while  you  're  weeping  here. 
His  hand  a  golden   harp  is  ftringing ; 
And   with   a   voice   serene  and   clear. 
His  ransomed  soul,  without  a  tear, 
His   Saviour's  praise  is  Tinging  ! 

And  think  that  all  his  pains  are  fled. 

His  toils  and   sorrows  closed  forever; 
While  He,  whose  blood  for  man  was  fhed, 


Death.  257 

Has  placed    upon   his  servant's   head 
A  crown  that  fadeth  never! 

For  thus,  while  round  your  lowly  bier 
Surviving   friends  are  sadly  bending, 
Your  souls,  like  his,  to  Jesus  dear, 
Shall  wing  their  flight  to  yonder  sphere, 
Faith   lighteft  pinions  lending. 

And  thus,  when  to  the  filent  tomb. 
Your  lifelefs  duft  like  his  is  given. 

Like  faith  fhall  whisper,  'midft  the  gloom. 

That  yet  again  in  faithful  bloom. 
That  duft  fhall  smile  in  heaven  ! 

Dr.  Huie. 


WHEN    A    SOUL   IS    NEWLY    DEPARTED. 


IF  joy  be  made  when  men  are  born 
To  live  on  earth  below. 
Why  fhould  we  vainly  weep  and  mourn, 

When  up  to  heav'n  they  go  ? 
To  pains  and  griefs  they  hither  come 

And  when  they  hence  are  gone. 
Those   troubles   they  are  eased   from 
Which   here  they  did  bemoan. 
17 


258 


Death. 


Imprison'd  in  a  living  grave, 

The   soul   departed   lay  ; 
And  ease  or  quiet  could  not  have. 

Till  call'd   it  was  away. 
But  we  now  hope  it  is  at  reft 

In  Him  from  whom  it   came, 
And  of  eternal  joys   pofTefT'd, 

Yov  which   we  praise   His  name. 

We  praise  thee  for  that  being,   Lord  ! 

And  for  that  means  of  grace, 
Which  to  that  soul  thou  dids't  afford 

In  this  inferior  place. 
And  we,  moreover,  praise  thee  now, 
That  thou  haft  set  it  free 
From  those  afflictions  which  below 
Avoided  cannot  be. 

George  JVither, 


THE    DYING    CHRISTIAN. 


DEATHLESS  principle,  arise! 
Soar,  thou  native   of  the   fkies  ! 
Pearl  of  price  by  Jesus  bought. 
To  his  glorious  liicenefs  wrought. 
Go,  to  fhine  before  his  throne, 
Deck  his  mediatorial  crown  ; 


Death. 


259 


Go,   his   triumph   to  adorn  ; 
Made   for  God,   to   God   return. 

Lo,  he  beckons  from  on  high  ! 
Fearlefs  to  his   presence   fly  ; 
Thine  the  merit  of  his  blood, 
Thine  the  righteousnefs  of  God  ! 
Angels,  joyful   to  attend, 
Hovering  round   thy  pillow   bend  ; 
Wait,  to  catch  the  fignal  given. 
And  escort  thee  quick  to   heaven. 

Is  thy  earthly   house   diftreft, 

Willino;  to  retain   its   o-ueft  ^. 

'T  is  not   thou,  but  it,  muft  die- — 

Fly,  celeftial   tenant,   fly ! 

Burfl:   thy   fhackles,   drop   thy  clay. 

Sweetly  breathe  thyself  away. 

Singing,  to  thy  crown   remove. 

Swift  of  wing,  and  fired  with  love. 


Shudder  not  to  pafs  the  ftream. 
Venture  all  thy   care  on   Him, 
Him,  whose  dying  love  and  power 
Stilled  its  tofling,  huftied  its   war  : 
Safe  as   the  expanded  wave. 
Gentle  as   the  summer's   eve, 
Not  one  obje£t  of  his  care 
Ever  suffered  fhipwreck  there  ! 


26o 


Death. 


See  the  haven  full  in  view, 

Love  divine  fhall  bear  thee  through  : 

Truft  to  that  propitious  gale, 

Weigh  thy   anchor,  spread  thy  sail ! 

Saints  in  glory  perfe6l  made, 

Wait  thy  pafl'age  through  the  (hade  ! 

Ardent  for  thy  coming  o'er. 

See  they  throng  the  blifsful  fhore  ! 


Mount,  their  transports  to  improve. 
Join  the  longing  choir  above. 
Swiftly  to  their  wifh  be  given, 
Kindle  higher  joy  in  heaven  ! 
Such  the  prospedls  that  arise. 
To  the  dying  Chriftian's  eyes  ! 
Such   the  glorious  vifta  Faith 
Opens  through  the  (hades  of  death  ! 


Top  lady. 


-^c^-e^co^T^— 


HEAVENLY  MINSTREL. 


ENTHRONED  upon  a  hill  of  light, 
A   heavenly  minftrel  fmgs  ; 
And  sounds  unutterably  bright 

Spring  from  the  golden  firings. 
Who  would  have  thought  so  fair  a  form 
Once  bent  beneath  an  earthly   florm  ! 


Death.  261 

Yet  was  he  sad  and  lonely   here  ; 

Of  low  and   humble   birth  ; 
And  mingled   while  in  this  dark  sphere, 

With  meaneft  sons  of  earth, 
In  spirit  poor,  in  look  forlorn, 
The  jefl  of  mortals  and   the  scorn. 

A   crown   of  heavenly  radiance  now, 

A  harp  of  golden  firings, 
Glitters   upon   his  deathlefs   brow, 

And  to  his  hymn-note  fings. 
The  bower  of  interwoven  light 
Seems  at  the  sound  to  grow  more  bright. 

Then,  while  with   visage  blank  and  sear, 

The  poor  in  soul  we  see  ; 
Let  us  not  think  what  he  is  here, 

But  what  he   soon   will   be  ; 
And  look  beyond  this  earthly   night. 
To  crowns  of  gold,  and  bowers  of  light. 

Edmejlon. 


262  Death. 


GONE. 

ANOTHER   hand   is  beckoning  us, 
Another  call  is   given  ; 
And  glows  once   more  with  angel  fteps 
The  path  which   reaches  heaven. 

Our  young  and  gentle  friend,  whose  smile 
Made  brighter  summer  hours, 

Amid  the  frofi:  of  Autumn  time 
Has  left  us,  with   the  flowers. 

No  paling  of  the  cheek  of  bloom 

Forewarned   us  of  decay  ; 
No  fhadow  from  the  Silent  Land 

Fell  round  our  fifter's  way. 

The  light  of  her  young  life  went  down. 

As  finks  behind  the   hill 
The  glory  of  a  setting  ftar, 

Clear,  suddenly,  and   ftill. 

As   pure  and  sweet  her   fair  brow  seemed, 

Eternal  as  the  fky  ; 
And  like  the  brook's  low  song,  her  voice 

A   sound  which  could  not  die. 


Death.  263 

And  half  we  deemed   {he  needed  not 

The  changing  of  her  sphere, 
To  give  to  heaven  a  fliining  one, 

Who  w^alked  an  angel  here. 

The   blefling  of  her  quiet  life 

Fell  on  us  like  the  dew  ; 
And  good  thoughts,  where  her  footfteps  prefTed, 

Like  fairy  bloffoms  grew. 

Sweet  promptings   unto  kindeft  deeds 

Were  in  her  very  look  ; 
We  read  her  face  as  one  who  reads 

A  true  and  holy  book. 

The   measure   of  a  blefled   hymn. 

To  which  our  hearts  could   move  ; 
The  breathing  of  an  inward  psalm, 

A   canticle  of  love. 

We  mifs  her  in  the  place  of  prayer. 

And  by  the  hearth-fire's  light ; 
We  pause  befide  her  door  to  hear 

Once  more  her  sweet  "  Good  night  !  '' 

There  seems  a  fhadow  on  the  day. 

Her  smile  no  longer  cheers  ; 
A  dimnefs  on   the  flars  of  night. 

Like  eyes  that  look  through   tears. 


264  Death. 

Alone   unto  our  Father's  will 

One  thought  hath  reconciled  — 
That  he  whose  love  exceedeth  ours 

Has  taken  home  his  child. 

Fold   her,  O   Father,  in  thine  arms  ; 

And  let  her  henceforth  be 
A  mefTenger  of  love  between 

Our  human  hearts  and  thee. 

Still  let  her  mild  rebuking  ftand 

Between  us  and  the  wrong, 
And  her  dear  memory  serve  to  make 

Our  faith   in  goodnefs   ftrong. 

And  grant  that   fhe,  who,  trembling  here, 

Diftrufted  all  her  powers. 
May  welcome  to  her  holier  home 

The  well-beloved  of  ours. 

J.  G.  Whittier. 


GRIEF   FOR   THE    DEAD. 

O   HEARTS  that  never  cease  to  yearn 
O  brimming  tears  that  ne'er  are  dried  ! 
The  dead,  though  they  depart,  return 
As  if  they  had  not  died  ! 


Death.  265 

The  living  are  the  only  dead  ; 

The  dead   live  —  nevermore   to  die; 
And  often   when  we   mourn  them   fled 

They  never  were  so  nigh. 

And  though  they  lie  beneath  the  waves, 
Or  fleep  within  the  churchyard  dim  — 

(Ah!  through  how  many  different  graves 
God's  children  go  to  him  !) 

Yet  every  grave  gives  up  its  dead 

Ere  it  is  overgrown  with   grafs  ! 
Then  why  fhould   hopelefs  tears  be  fhed, 

Or  need   we  cry,   Alas  ! 

Or   why  fhould   memory   veil'd   with   gloom, 
And  like  a  sorrowing  mourner  craped, 

Sit  weeping  o'er   an   empty  tomb 
Whose  captives  have  escaped  ! 

'T  is  but  a  mound  —  and  will  be  moffed 
Whene'er  the   summer  grafs   appears;  — 

The  loved,  though  wept,  are  never  loft  ; 
We  only  lose  our  tears. 

Nay,  Hope  may  whisper  with  the  dead, 
By  bending  forward  where  they  are ; 

But,  Memory,   with  a  backward  tread, 
Communes   with   them   afar! 


266 


Death. 


The  joys  we  lose  are  but  forecaft, 

And   we  fhall   find  them  all  once  more;  — 

We   look  behind   us   for  the   paft, 
But  lo  !  't  is  all  before  ! 


GOOD    NIGHT. 

GOOD  night !   a  word  so  often  said, 
The  heedlefs   mind  forgets  its   meaning  ; 
'  r  is  only  when   some   heart  lies  dead 

On  which  our  own  was  leaning, 
We  hear  in   maddeninp;  mufic  roll 
That  laft  "  good  night  "  along  the  soul. 

"Good  night"  —  in  tones  that  never  die 
It  peals  along  the  quickening  ear  ; 

And  tender  gales  of  memory 
Forever  waft  it  near, 

When   rtilled  the   voice  —  O   crufh  of  pain  !  — 

That  ne'er  fliall  breathe  "  2ood  ni":ht  "  atrain. 


Good  night!   it  mocks   us  from  the  o-rave  — 
It  overleaps  that  ftrange  world's  bound 

From   whence  there  flows  no  backward   wave  — 
It  calls  from  out  the  ground, 

On  every  fide,   around,  above, 

"  Good   night,"   "  good  night,"   to  life  and   love  I 


Death.  267 

Good  night !  O,  wherefore  fades  away 
The  light   that   lived   in   that  dear   word  ? 

^'N  hy  follows  that  good  night  no  day  ? 
\\'hy  are  our  souls  ?o  ftirred  ? 

O,   rather  sav,  dull   brain,   once   more, 

"Good   night  !    thy   time  of  toil   is    o'er!" 

Go.)d  night  I  —  now  cometh  gentle   deep, 

And  tears  that  fall  like  gentle  rain  ; 
Good   night  !    O,  holy,  bleft  and  deep, 

The  reft  that  follows  pain  ! 
How  (hould  we  reach   God's  upper  light 
If  life's  long  day  had  no  "  good  night." 

Chambers''  Journal. 


THE    VISION. 

I   FASHIONED  in  my  soul  a  fantasy 
Of  moft  surpafTing  richnefs  ;   as   my  heart 
In   memory   turns   to   it,   figh   follows   figh, 
And   my  sad   tear-drops   in   disquiet   ftart. 

I   walked   upon   heaven's   calm   and   azure   fhore, 
And   o'er  my  ear,   like   murmurings   of  the   sea, 

By  diftance  softened,  came  the  gathering  roar 
Of  the   far  regions  of  mortality. 


268 


Death 


And    thou   wert  with    me    there  —  thou  beft  and  bright 
one, 

Whom   upon  earth  I  loved  and  loft,  and  thou 
With  that  sweet  voice  that  could  so  well  delight  one, 

Wert  softly   breathing  thy  heart's  tremulous  vow. 

And  thou  wert  mine   forever  —  yes,  forever. 
In  thine   unfading  beauty's  earthlefs  bloom; 

There  were  no  mortal  hands  our  vows  to  sever, 
There  for  our  loves  there  yawned  no  mortal  tomb. 

And  thou  bent  on   me  thine  eye's  meek  afFeilion 
With  an   unchanging  gaze  ;   there  was  no  fear. 

No  trouble  in  that  sweet  look,  no  deje6lion. 
No  earthly   fhade,  save  rapture's   holy  tear. 

Then  a  bright  angel,  with  a  lovely  voice. 
Cried,  *'  This   for  all  your  mortal  sufferings  ; 

This  for  your  crofs  in  patience  borne  —  rejoice  !  " 
The  light  air  trembled  to  his  pafling  wings. 


And  rapturous  was  our  lot  ;   undying  youth. 

Hearts  purified  by  trial,   fadelefs  love. 
Rejoicing  in   the   fulnefs  of  its   truth  ; 

All  that  on  earth   we   vainly  hoped  to  prove. 

And  yet,  though  angels  now,  we  were  meek-hearted 

The  vifion  pafTed  ;  in  anguifh  I  awoke. 
Shed  some  sad  tears  o'er  heavenly   hopes  departed, 
Then   patiently  put  on   my  mortal  yoke. 


Death. 


ibc) 


THE   REVERIE. 

O!  THAT   in   unfettered   union, 
Spirit   could   with   spirit  blend  ; 
O  !   that  in  unseen  communion, 

Thought  could   hold  the  diftant  friend! 
Who   the  secret  can  unravel. 

Of  the  body's  myftic  gueft  ? 
Who  knows  how  the  soul   may  travel, 
Which  unconsciously   we  reft  ? 

While  in  pleafing  thraldom  lying. 

Sealed  in  (lumbers  deep  it  seems, 
Far  abroad  it  may  be  flying  — 

What  is  fleep  ?  and  what  are  dreams  ? 
Earth,  how  narrow  thy  dominions, 

And   how  flow  the  body's  pace  ! 
O  !  to  range  on  eagle  pinions 

Through  illimitable  space. 


What  is  thought  ?  can  it  be  bounded  ? 

Will  it  own  a  tyrant's  chain  ? 
By  material   things  surrounded 

Will  it  in  their  grasp  remain  ? 
No  !   it  walks  at  large  through  nature. 

Leaving  lingering  winds  behind. 


270 


Death. 


Tracing  every  well-known  feature 
Of  the  friend's  congenial   mind. 


Has  a  ftrange,  myfterious   feeling, 

Something  fhapelefs,  undefined, 
O'er  thy  lonely   mufings  ftealing. 

Ne'er  imprefled   thy   penfive   mind  ; 
As  if  he,  whose   ftrong  resemblance 

Fancy  in  that   moment  drew, 
By  coincident  remembrance, 

Knew  your  thoughts  —  and  thought  of  you  ? 

When  at  Mercy's  footftool  bending. 

Thou   haft   felt  a   secret  glow  ; 
Faith  and   hope  to  heaven  ascending, 

Love   ftill  lingerintr  below  : 
Say,  has  ne'er  the  thought  imprefled  thee. 

That  thy  friend  might  feel  thy  prayer  ! 
Or   the  wifti  at  leaft  poflefl'ed  thee. 

He  could  then  thy  feeling  fhare  ? 

Who  can  tell  ?   that  fervent  blefling. 

Angels,  did  you  hear  it  rise  ? 
Do  you  thus  your  love  expreffing. 

Watch   o'er  human   sympathies  ? 
Do  ye  some  myfterious  token 

To  the   kindred   bosom   bear  ? 
And  to  what  the  heart  has  spoken, 

Wake  a  chord  responfive  there  ? 


Death. 


271 


Laws,  perhaps   unknown,  but  certain, 

Kindred  spirits   may  control ; 
But  what  hand  can  h'ft  the  curtain, 

And  reveal  the  awful  soul  ? 
Dimly   through  life's  vapor  seeing. 

Who  but  longs  for  light  to  break! 
O   this  feverifh  dream  of  being! 

When,  my   friend,  fhall  we  awake  ? 

Yes,   the  hour,  the  hour  is  hafting. 

Spirit  Jhall  with  spirit  blend  ; 
Faft  mortality  is  wafting, 

Then  the  secret  all  fhall  end. 
Let,  then,   thought  hold  sweet  communion. 

Let  us  breathe  the  mutual  prayer. 
Till  in  heaven's  eternal   union, 

O   my  friend,  to   meet  thee  there  ! 


PART    II. 


Oh  !  the  hour  when  this   material 

Shall  have  vanifhed   like   a  cloud 
When  amid  the  wide  ethereal. 

All  the  invifible  (hall  crowd  ; 
And  the  naked  soul,  surrounded 

With  innumerous  hofts  of  light. 
Triumph   in  the  view   unbounded, 

And  adore   the   Infinite. 


2-/2  Death. 

In   that  sudden,   ftrange   tranfition, 

By   what  new   and   finer  sense 
Shall  fhe  grasp  the   mighty   vifion, 

And  receive  its  influence  ? 
Angels  guard  the  new  immortal 

Through  the  wonder-teeming   space, 
To  the  everlafting  portal, 

To  the  spirit's  refting  place. 

Will  fhe  there  no  fond  emotion, 

Nought  of  early  love  retain  ? 
Or,  absorbed  in  pure  devotion. 

Will  no  mortal  trace   remain  ? 
Can  the  grave  those  ties  diflever. 

With  the  very  heart-ftrings  twined  ? 
Muft  fhe  part,   and  part  forever. 

With  the  friend  fhe  leaves   behind  ? 

No;  the  paft  fhe  ftill  remembers; 

Faith  and  hope  surviving  too, 
Ever  watch  those  fleeping  embers 

Which   muft  rise  and  live  anew  ; 
For  the  widowed,  lonely  spirit. 

Mourns  till  fhe  be  clothed  afrefh! 
Longs  perfe£iion  to   inherit. 

And  to  triumph  in  the  flefh. 

Angels,  let  the  ransom'd  ftranger 
In  your  tender  care  be  bleft, 


Death.  273 

Hoping,   trufliiig,   free   from   danger, 

Till   the   trumpet   end   her  relt  ; 
Till  the   trump   which   fhakes   creation, 

Throurt;h  the  circlino   heaven   (hall   roll. 
Till  the   day   of  consummation, 

Till   the   bridal   of  the  soul. 

Can    I   truft   a   fellow-being  ? 

Can  I   truft  an  angel's  care  ? 
O,  thou   merciful   All-seeing, 

Beam  around  my  spirit  there! 
Jesus,  blefTed  -Mediator, 

Thou   the  airy   path    haft   trod  ! 
Thou,  the  Judge,   the   Consummator, 

Shepherd   of  the   fold   of  God  ! 

BlelFed    fold  !   no   foe   can    enter, 

And   no   friend   departeth   thence : 
Jesus   is   their  sun,   their  centre. 

And  their  fhield   Omnipotence  : 
Blefled  !   for  the   Lamb   fhall   feed   them, 

All   their  tears   fhall  wipe  away  ; 
To  the  living   fountains  lead   them, 

Till   fruition's   perfeft  day. 

Lo  !    it  comes,   that  day   of  wonder. 

Louder  chorals   fhalce  the   fkies  ; 
Hades'  gates  are  burft  asunder. 

See  the  new-clothed  myriads  rise  ! 


274 


Conder. 


Death. 

Thought,  reprefs  thy  weak  endeavor, 
Here  inuft  reason  proftrate   fall  : 

O  the   ineffable  For-Ever ! 
And  the  Eternal  All  in   All ! 


*®^5®**** 


HEAVEN. 

THE  golden  palace  of  my  God 
Towering  above  the  clouds   I   see  ; 
Beyond  the  cherub's   bright  abode, 
Higher  than  angels'   thoughts  can   be. 

t3  DO 

How  can   I   in  those  courts  appear 
Without  a  wedding-garment  on  r 
Conduct  me,  thou   Life-giver,  there, 
Condu6l  me  to  thy  glorious  throne  ! 
And  clothe  me  with  thy  robes  of  light, 
And  lead   me   through   fin's  darksome  night. 
My  Saviour  and   my  God. 

RuJJian  Poetry. 


Death.  275 


THE   VALEDICTION. 

WHEN  the  death-dews  dim   my  eyes, 
And   my   bosom   panting  lies, 
Ebbing  Hfe's  receding  fighs, 

Shorter,  fainter,  growing  ; 
Ere  my  spirit  breaks  her  way, 
Through   her  prison-walls  of  clay, 
Into  realms  of  endlefs  day  — 

The  land  to   which  I'm   goins  — 

May  the  dear  familiar  band 

Of  weeping  friends  that  round   me  ftand. 

Watching  the  decreafing  sand, 

Faft   and   fafter  flowing. 
Chant   some  low  ftrain,  blending  well 
With   the  solemn  pafTing  bell, 
Of  the   holy   home   to  tell  — 

The  land  to  which  I  'm  going. 

Let  them   fing,   "  Dear  suffering  one. 
Soon   thy  journey   will  be  done, 
Thy  fight  be  fought,  thy  race  be  run  : 
Thy  soul,  with  rapture  glowing. 
The  everlafting  hills  fhall  see, 
Where  pain  no  more  can  come  to  thee. 


276  Death. 

And  neither  fin   nor  sorrow  be  — 

The  land  to  which  thou  'rt  going. 

*■*■  He   thy  Saviour  and  thy  guide, 
For  thy  guilty  sake  that  died, 
Even   now  is  by  thy  fide, 

Comfort  thoughts   beftowing. 
Angelic   forms  their  arms  extend. 
And  smileth  many  a  long-lofl  friend 
Glad  welcome  to  thy  journey's  end  — 

The  land  to   which  thou  'rt  going." 

Then,   as  the  burden  of  their  song 
In  faint  sweet  cadence  dies  along, 
One  happy,  radiant  look  among 

That  group  of  mourners  throwing  j 
Juft  as  they  faded   from   my  view, 
I   fain   would   breathe  one   fond   adieu. 
Till  in  that  land  we  meet  anew  — 

The  land  to  which  I  'm  eoin?- 


Death. 


277 


OVER   THE   RIVER. 

OVER   the  river  they  beckon  to  me  — 
Loved   ones   who  've  crolled   to  the   further  fide  \ 
The  gleam  of  their  snowy  robes  1   see, 

But  their  voices   are  drowned  in  the  rufhing  tide. 
There  's  one  with   ringlets  of  sunny  gold, 

And  eyes,  the  reflection  of  heaven's  own  blue  5 
He  croffed  in  the  twilight,  gray  and  cold. 

And   the  pale  mifl  hid   him   from   mortal   view. 
We  saw  not  the  angels  who  met  him  there  ; 

The  gates  of  the  city  we  could  not  see  ; 
Over  the  river,   over   the  river, 

My   brother   ftands  waiting  to  welcome   me  ! 


Over  the  river,  the  boatman   pale 

Carried  another  —  the  household  pet: 
Her  brown  curls  waved   in  the  gentle  gale  — 

Darling  Minnie  !  I  see  her  yet. 
She  croffed  on    her  bosom   her  dimpled  hands, 

And   fearleflly   entered  the  phantom   bark  ; 
We  watched   it  glide   from  the  filver  sands. 

And  all  our  sunfhine  grew   ftrangely  dark. 
We  know  (he  is  safe  on  the  further  fide, 

Where  all  the  ransomed   and  angels   be  ; 
Over  the  river,  the   myftic  river, 

My  childhood's   idol  is   waiting   for   me. 


278  Death. 

For  none  return  from  those  quiet  (hores, 

Who  crofs  with  the  boatman   cold  and  pale  ; 
We  hear  the  dip  of  the  golden  oars, 

And  catch  a   gleam  of  the  snowy  sail, — 
And  lo  !   they  have  pafTed   from  our  yearning  heart ; 

They  crofs  the  ftream,  and  are  gone   for  aye  ; 
We  may  not  sunder  the  veil  apart, 

That  hides   from  our  vifion  the  gates  of  day. 
We  only  know  that  their  barks  no  more 

May  sail  with   us  o'er  life's  ftormy  sea  ; 
Yet  somewhere,  I   know,  on   the  unseen  fhore, 

They  watch,  and  beckon,  and  wait  for  me. 

And   I   fit  and   think,  when   the  sunset's  gold, 

Is  flufhing  river,  and  hill,  and   fhore, 
I   fhall  one  day  fi:and  by  the  water  cold. 

And  lift  for  the  sound  of  the  boatman's  oar  ; 
I   fhall   watch   for  a  gleam  of  the   flapping  sail  ; 

I   ftiall  hear  the  boat  as  it  gains  the  ftrand  ; 
I  (hall  pafs   from   fight,  with  the  boatman  pale, 

To  the   better  fhore  of  the  spirit  land  ; 
I  fhall  know   the  loved  who  have  gone  before, — 

And  joyfully  sweet  will  the  meeting  be, 
When  over  the  river,   the  peaceful  river. 

The  Angel  of  Death  fhall  carry  me. 

Mifs  N.  A.  W.  PrieJL 


He 


279 


HEAVEN. 


HEAVEN. 


AN    ANCIENT    HYMN. 


BRIEF  life  is  here  our  portion, 
Brief  sorrow,  fhort-lived   care  ; 
The  life  that  knows  no  ending, 

The  tearlefs  life  is  there. 
Reward  of  grace  how  wondrous  ! 

Short  toil,  —  eternal   reft! 
Oh !  miracle  of  mercy, 

That  rebels  Ihould  be  bleft  ! 


That  we,  with  fin  polluted. 

Should   have  our  home  so  high  ! 
That  we  fhould  dwell  in  manfions 

Beyond  the  ftarry  fky  ! 
And  now  we  fight  the  battle. 

And  then  we  wear  the  crown 
Of  full  and  everlafting 

And  ever  brio-ht  renown. 


28o  Heaven. 

I   know  not,  oh !   I   know  not 

What  social  joys  are  there; 
What   pure,   unfading  glory  ; 

What  light   beyond   compare  ; 
And  when  I   fain  would   fing  them. 

My   spirit   fails   and   faints, 
And   vainly   ftrives   to   image 

The  afTembly   of  the  saints. 

There   is   the   throne  of  David  ; 

And  there,  from  toil  released. 
The   fliout  of  them  that  triumph. 

The  song  of  them  that   feall: ! 
O  Garden    free  from   sorrow  ! 

O   Plains  that   fear  no  fl:rife  ! 
O   princely  Bowers,   all  blooming  ! 

O   Realm  and   Home  of  life  ! 


*»*®@**'~ 


HEREAFTER. 

OTHOU,  on  earth  beloved,  adored, 
A4y   friend,   my  father,  and   my   Lord, 
I    see   thee   now   without  a   veil, — 
Help ;   or  my   dazzled   fight   will    fail. 

0  bear  me  to  that  burning  throne 

1  scarce  can  brook  to  gaze  upon. 


Heaven.  28 1 

And  give   mv   kindling  soul  to  prove 

The  raptures   of  ecihitic   love  ; 

And  learn  unutterable  lays, 

And   hymn   thee   in   eternal   praise  ! 

Shrink  like  a  scroll,   thou   frighted  fky  ! 

Earth  —  tremble  into   vacancy! 

Lill  to   the   pealing  trumpet's   swell. 

Ye   hideous   depths  of  death   and   hell,  — 

Burft  your  ftrong  chain,  your  gates  unclose, 

And  break  the  long  —  the  laft  repose. 

Blefl:  train   of  martyred   saints,  arise  ! 

Look  upward  to  your  native   fkies  ! 

Arise!  and  claim  your  rich   reward, 

And   fliare  the  triumph   of  your  Lord. 

Behold   the   promised   heavenly  home, — 

The  conquering  palm,  —  the  golden   throne, — 

And   more   than    all,  —  that  beaming  eye, 

Whose  glance   is   love   and   ecftacy  ! 

But   lo  !    what  sudden   splendors   beaming. 

O'er    heaven's   illumined   arch   are   ftreaming  ; 

What   hues   of  varied   beauty   blending. 

What  fair  celeftial  towers  descending! 

0  Salem,  city  of  our  God  ! 

The   saints'  —  the  martyrs'  bleft  abode,  — 

1  see  thy  gates  of  pearl  unfold, 

I  see  thy   ftreets  of  burnifhed  gold  ; 
I   see  thy   towers  of  cryftal  fhine ! 
Meet  temples   for  a  King  divine. 
Hail   perfect,   pure   in   virgin   pride  ! 
The  mightv  Lamb's  resplendent  bride  ! 


282  Heaven. 

Within  thy  hallowed  courts  are  found, 
No  lurking  cares  to   vex  or  wound  : 
No  dim  eye  fheds   the  hopelefs  tear, 
No  bosom  throbs  with  doubt  or  fear  ; 
And  huftied  is  Shame's  tumultuous  thrill, 
And   PafTion's  warring  ftorm  is   ftill. 
No  bright  sun  beams   by   day,  —  by  night 
No  pale  moon   flieds  her   feebler  light, — 
But  from  that  throne  of  living  fire. 
Where  fits  revealed  the   Eternal  Sire, 
Where  seraphs  raise  their  loudefl  ftrain. 
To  hail  the  Lamb  that  once  was   flain, — 
Though  Faith  and   Hope  have  pafled  away. 
Love  fheds  a  pure  unchanging  ray  ; 
What  faintly  fhone  on   earth  before. 
Now  beams  and  burns  forevermore. 


Dale. 


PRAISE    IN    HEAVEN. 

HARK!  hark!  the  voice  of  ceaselefs  praise. 
Around  Jehovah's  throne  ; 
Songs   of  celeflial  joy  they  raise. 
To   mortal  lips   unknown. 

Upon  the  sea  of  glafs  they   ftand, 
In   fhining   robes   of  light ; 


Heaven. 

The  harps  of  God  arc  in  their  hand, 
They  reft  not  day  or   night. 

Oh !  for  an  angel's  perfe6l  love, 

A  seraph's  soaring   wing, 
To  fing  with  thousand  saints  above, 

The   triumphs   of  our  King. 

On  earth  our  feeble   voice  we  try, 
In  weaknefs  and  in  fhame, 

We  blefs,  we  laud,  we   magnify, 
We  conquer   in    his  name. 

But   oh  '   with   pure  and  finlefs  heart, 

His   mercies  to  adore. 
My  God,  to  know  thee  as   thou  art. 

Nor  grieve  thy  spirit  more. 

Oh!  blefled  hope!  a  "little  while," 
And   we,  amidft  that  throng. 

Shall  live  in  our  Redeemer's  smile, 
And  swell  the  angels'  song. 


2«3 


284  ^^ 


THERE    SHALL   BE    NO    MORE    SEA. 
Rev.  21  :    I. 

WHEN  tempefts   tofs,  and  billows  roll, 
And  lightnings  rend  from  pole  to  pole 
Sweet  is  the  thought  to  me, 
That  one   day  it  fhall  not   be  so  : 
In   the  bright  world  to   which   I  go, 
The  tenipeft   fhall   forget  to  blow  : 
There  fhall  be  no  more  sea. 

My  little  bark  has  suffered  much 
From   adverse   florms  ;   nor  is   fhe   such 

As  once  fhe  seemed  to  be  : 
But  1   fhall  fhortly  be  at  home. 
No  more  a  mariner  to  roam  ; 
When  once  1   to  the  port  am  come, 

There  will  be  no  more  sea. 

Then  let  the  waves  run  mountains  high. 
Confound   the  deep,   perplex  the  fky. 

This  fhall  not  always  be  : 
One  day  the  sun   will  brightly  fhine 
With  life,  and  light,  and  heat  divine  ; 
And  when  that  glorious  land   is  mine. 

There  will  be  no  more  sea. 


Heaven.  285 

My   Pilot  tells   me  not  to  fear, 
But  trufl:  entirely  to  his  care, 

And   he  will  guarantee, 
If  only    I  depend  on  him, 
To  land   me  safe  in  his  good  time. 
In  yonder  purer,  happier  clime. 
Where  fhall  be  no  more  sea. 

Fyjh. 


THERE    WAS   SILENCE    IN    HEAVEN. 
Rev.  8  :   I. 

CAN  angel  spirits  need   repose 
In  the  full  sun-light  of  the  (ky  .? 
And   can  the  veil  of  flumber  close 
A   cherub's   bright  and   blazing  eye  ? 

Have  seraphim  a  weary  brow  ; 

A  fainting   heart,  an  aching  breaft ! 
No,  far  too  high   their  pulses  flow. 

To  languifh   with  inglorious  reft. 

Oh!  not  the  death-like  calm  of  fleep 
Could   hufh   the   everlafting  song  ; 

No   fairy  dream  or  flumber  deep 

Entrance   the   wrapt  and    holy  throng. 


286  Heaven. 

Yet  not  the  lighteft   tone  was   heard 
From  angel  voice,  or  angel  hand  ; 

And   not  one  plumed   pinion   ftirr'd 
Among  the  pure  and  blifsful  band. 

For  there  was  filence  in  the  fky, 

A  joy  not  angel  tongues  could   tell,  — 

As   from  its  myftic  fount  on   high. 
The  peace  of  God   in   ftillnefs   fell. 

O   what  is  filence  here  below  ? 

The  fruit  of  a  conceal'd  despair  ; 
The  pause  of  pain,  the  dream  of  woe;  — 

It  is  the  reft  of  rapture   there. 

And  to  the  way-worn   pilgrim   here, 

More  kindred  seems  that  perfect  peace, 

Than  the   full  chaunts  of  joy  to  hear. 
Roll  on,  and  never,  never  cease. 

From  earthly  agonies  set   free. 

Tired  with  the  path  too  flowly  trod. 

May   such  a  filence  welcome  me 
Into   the   palace  of  my   God. 


Heaven. 


287 


HEAVEN. 

HERE   may  the  band   that  now   in   triumph   (hines, 
And  that  (before  they  were  inverted  thus) 
In   earthly  bodies  carried  heavenly  minds, 
Pitch  round  about,  in  order  glorious. 
Their  sunny  tents  and  houses  luminous  ; 
All  their  eternal  day  in  songs  employing, 
Joying  their  end  without  end  of  their  joying, 
While   their    Almighty   Prince  deitruilion   is   dv^ftroying. 

Their  fight  drinks   lovely   fires   in  at   their  eyes, 

Their  breath    sweet    incense   with    fine    breath    ac- 
cloys. 

That  on   God's   sweating  altar  burning  lies  ; 

Their  hungry  ears   feed   on  the    heavenly   noise 
That  angels   fing   to   tell   their   untold  joys  ; 

Their  underftanding,   naked  truth,  their  wills, 

The  all   and   self-sufficient  goodnefs   fills. 

That  nothing   here  is   wanting  but  the   want   of  ills. 


No   sorrow  now  hangs   clouding  on   their  brow  ; 

No  bloodlefs  malady  empales  their  face  : 
No  age  drops  on  their  hairs  his  filver  snow  ; 

No  nakednefs  their  bodies   doth  embase  ; 

No  poverty  themselves   and   theirs  disgrace  ; 


288  Heaven. 

No  fear  of  death  the  joy  of  life  devours  ; 
No   uiichafle    fleep   their   precious   time   deflowers  ; 
No    lofs,    no    grief,    no    change    wait    on     their    winged 
hours. 

But  now  their  naked  bodies  scorn  the  cold, 

And    from    their    eyes    joy     looks    and    laughs    at 
pain  ; 

The  infant  wonders  how   he  came  so  old, 

7  he  old   man  how  he  came  so  young  again  ; 
Still  reftingj  though   from  fleep  they   ftill  refrain  ; 

Where  all  are  rich,  and  yet  no  gold  they  owe  ; 

And  all  are  kings,  and  yet  no  subje(5ls   know. 

All  full,  and  yet  no  time  they  do  on   food  beflow. 

About  the  holy  city  rolls  a  flood 

Of  molten  cryftal,  like  a  sea  of  glafs, 
On  which  weak  ftream  a  fl:rono;  foundation  flood  : 
Of  living  diamonds  the  building  was. 
That  all  things  else,  befides  itself,  did  pafs. 
Her  flreets,  inftead  of  ftones,  the  flars  did  pave, 
And  little  pearls  for  duft  it  seemed  to  have. 
On    which    soft    ftreaming    manna    like    pure    snow    did 
wave. 

It  is  no  flaming  luftre,   made  of  light  ; 

No  sweet  consent,  or   well-tuned   harmony  j 
Ambrofia,   for  to  feaft  the  appetite  ; 

Or  flowery  odor  mixed   with   spicery  ; 

No  soft  embrace  or  pleasure  bodilv  : 


Heaven. 


289 


And  yet  it  is  a  kind  of  inward   feaft, 

A   harmony  that  sounds  within  the  breaft, 

An  odor,  light,  embrace,  in  which  the   soul  doth  reft. 

A  heavenly  feaft  no  hunger  can  consume  ; 

A   light  unseen,  yet  ftiines  in  every   place ; 
A  sound  no  time  can  fteal  ;  a  sweet  perfume 

No  winds  can  scatter  ;  an  entire  embrace 

That  no  satiety  can  e'er  unlace  ; 
Ingraced  into  so  high  a  favor  there, 

The  saints  with   their  beaupeers  whole  worlds  outwear. 
And  things  unseen  do  see,  and  things  unheard  do  hear. 

Ye  blefled  souls,  grown  richer  by  your   spoil. 

Whose    lofs,    though    great,    is    cause    of    greater 
gains  ; 
Here  may  your  weary  spirits  reft  from  toil, 

Spending  your  endlefs  evening  that  remains 
Among  those  white  flocks  and  celeftial  trains 
That  feed   upon  their  Shepherd's  eyes,  and   frame 
That  heavenly  mufic  of  so  wondrous   frame, 
Psalming  aloud  the  holy  honors  of  his  name  ! 

Giles  Fletcher.      1586-1623. 


19 


290  He 


NEARER   HOME. 

ONE  sweetly  welcome  thought, 
Comes  to  me  o'er  and  o'er  ; 
T  'm  nearer  home  to-day 

Than  I  've  ever  been  before  ; 

Nearer  my  Father's  house 

Where  the  many  manfions  be  ; 

Nearer  the  Great  White  Throne, 
Nearer  the  Jasper  Sea  ; 

Nearer  that  bound  of  life. 

Where  we  lay  our  burdens  down  — 
Nearer  leaving  the  crofs. 

Nearer  gaining  the  crown. 

But  lying  dimly  between. 

Winding  down  through  the  night. 
Lies  the  dark  and  uncertain   ftream 

That  leads  us  at  length  to  the  light. 

Closer  and  closer  my  fteps 

Come  to  the   dark  abysm. 
Closer  Death  to  my  lips 

Prefies  the  awful  chrism  ; 


Heaven.  29 1 

Father,  perfect  my  truft  ! 

Strengthen   my   feeble  faith  ! 
Let  me   feel  as  I  would  when   I   ftand 

On   the  fhores  of  the  river  of  Death  — 

Feel  as  I   would,  were  my  feet 

Even  now   flipping  over  the  brink  ; 

For  it  may  be  I  'm   nearer  home, 
Nearer  now,  than   I  think! 

Mr.   Carey. 


THE   TWO   WORLDS. 

TWO    worlds    there    are.      To    one    our    eyes    we 
drain, 
Whose  magic  joys  we  fhall  not  see  again  : 

Bright  haze  of  morning  veils  its  glimmering  fhore. 
Ah,  truly  breathed  we  there 
Intoxicating  air  — 
Glad  were  our  hearts  in  that  sweet  realm  of 
Nevermore. 

The  lover  there  drank  her  delicious  breath 
Whose  love  has  yielded  fince  to  change   or  death  ; 
The  mother  killed  her  child  whose  days  are  o'er. 
Alas  !  too  soon  have  fled 
The  irreclaimable  dead  : 
We  see  them  —  vifions  ftrange — amid  the 
Nevermore. 


292  Heaven. 

The  merry  song  some  maiden  used  to  fmg  — 
The  brown,  brown  hair  that  once  was  wont  to  cling 
To  temples  long  clay-cold  :  to  the  very  core 
They  ftrike  our  weary   hearts, 
As  some  vexed   memory  ftarts 
From  that  long  faded  land  —  the  realm  of 
Nevermore. 

It  is  perpetual  summer  there.      But   here 
Sadly  we  may  remember  rivers  clear. 

And  harebells  quivering  on  the  meadow-floor. 
For  brighter  bells  and  bluer. 
For  tenderer  hearts  and  truer, 
People  that  happy  land  —  the  realm  of 
Nevermore. 

Upon  the  frontier  of  this  fhadowy  land 
We,   pilgrims  of  eternal  sorrow,   ftand  : 

What  realm  lies  forward,  with  its  happier  ftore 
Of  forefts  green  and  deep. 
Of  valleys   hufhed  in   fleep, 
And  lakes  moft  peaceful  ?     'T  is  the  land  of 
Evermore. 

Very  far   off  its   marble  cities  seem  — 
Very  far  off — beyond  our  sensual  dream  — 
Its  woods,   unruffled  by  the  wild  winds'  roar  : 
Yet  does  the  turbulent  surge 
Howl  on  its  very  verge. 
One  moment  —  and   we  breathe  within   the 
Evermore. 


Heaven. 


293 


They  whom   we  loved  and  loft  so  long  ago, 
Dwell  in  those  cities,  fiir  from   mortal  woe  — 

Haunt    those    frelh    woodlands,    whence    sweet    carol- 
lings  soar. 
Eternal  peace  have  they  : 
God  wipes  their  tears  away  : 
They  drink  that  river  of  life  which  flows  for 
Evermore. 

Thither  we  haften  through  these  regions  dim, 
But  lo  !  the  wide  wings  of  the  Seraphim 
Shine  in   the  sunset !     On  that  joyous  fhore 
Our  lightened  hearts  fliall   know 
The  life  of  long  ago  : 
The  sorrow-burdened  paft  fhall  fade  for 
Evermore. 

Dublin  XJniverfity  Magazine. 


Miscellaneous.  297 


MISCELLANEOUS. 


•~-t-^^COQ<t — 


THE    SOUL. 


AGAIN,  how  can  (lie  but  immortal  be, 
When  with  the  motions  of  both  will  and  wit 
She  ftill  aspireth  to  eternity. 
And  never  refts  till  fhe  attain  to  it  ? 

Water  in  conduit-pipes  can  rise  no  higher 

Than  the  well-head   from  \yhence  it  firft  doth   spring  : 

Then,  fince  to  eternal  God  fhe  doth   aspire. 
She  cannot  be  but  an  eternal  thing. 

"  All   movino-  thin2;s  to  other  thing's  do  move 

Of  the  same  kind,  which   fhows  their  nature  such  ;  " 

So  earth   falls   down,   and   fire  doth   mount  above. 
Till  both  their  proper  elements  do  touch. 

And  as  the  moifture  which  the  thirfty   earth 
Sucks  from  the  sea  to  fill  her  empty  veins, 

From  out  her  womb  at  laft  doth  take  a  birth, 
And  runs  a  lymph  along  the  grafiy   plains  : 


298  Miscellaneous. 


Long  doth   fhe  ftay,  as  loth  to  leave  the  land 
P  rom  whose  soft  fide  the  firfl:  did  ifTue  make  ; 

She  taftes  all  places,  turns  to  every  hand, 
Her  flowery  banks  unwilling  to  forsake. 

Yet  Nature  so  her  ftreams  doth  lead   and  carry, 
As  that  her  course  doth   make  no  final  ftay, 

Till  fhe  herself  unto  the  Ocean   marry. 
Within  whose  watery  bosom  firft  fhe  lay. 

E'en  so  the  soul,  which  in  this   earthly  mould 
The  spirit  of  God  doth  secretly  infuse. 

Because  at  firft  fhe   doth  the  earth  behold, 
And  only  this  material  world  fhe  views. 

At  firft  her  mother   Earth  fhe  holdeth  dear, 

And  doth  embrace  the  world,  and  worldly  things 

She  flies  close  by  the  ground  and   hovers  here. 
And  mounts  not  up  with   her  celeftial  wings  ; 

Yet  under  heaven  fhe  cannot  light  on  aught 
That  with  her  heavenly  nature  doth  agree  ; 

She  cannot  reft,  fhe  cannot  fix  her  thought, 
She  cannot  in  this  world  contented  be. 

For  who  did   ever  yet,  in  honor,  wealth. 

Or   pleasure  of  the  sense,  contentment  find? 

Who  ever  ceased  to  wifh   when  he  had  wealth  ? 
Or  having  wisdom  was   not  vexed   in  mind  ? 


Miscellaneous. 


299 


Then  as  a  bee,  which  among  weeds  doth   fall, 

Which  seem  sweet  flowers  with  luftre  frefh  and   gay, 

She  lights  on  that  and  this,  and  tafteth   all  ; 

But  pleased  with  none,   doth  rise  and   soar  away. 

So  when  the  soul  finds  here  no   true  content. 
And  like  Noah's  dove  can  no  sure   footing  take, 

She  doth  return  from  whence  {he  firft  was   sent, 
And  flies  to   Him   that  firft  her  wings  did  make. 

So  while  the  virgin  soul  on  earth  doth   ftay, 

She,  wooed  and  tempted   in  ten  thousand  ways. 

By  these  great  powers  which  on  the   earth  bear  sway. 
The  wisdom  of  the  world,  wealth,  pleasure,  praise  ; 

With  these  sometimes  (he  doth   her  time  beguile, 

These  do  by   fibs   her   fantasy  poflefs  ;. 
But  Ihe  diftaftes  them  all  within  a  while, 

And   in   the  sweeteft  finds  a  tediousnefs  ; 

But  if  upon  the  world's  Almighty  King 

She  once  doth   fix  her  humble,  loving  thoughts; 

Who  by  his  pidlure  drawn  in  every  thing. 
And  sacred   meiTages,  her  love  hath   sought  ; 


Of  Him  fhe  thinks  fhe  cannot  think  too  much  ; 

This  honey  tafted   ftill,   is  ever  sweet ; 
The  pleasure  of  her  ravifhed  thought  is  such, 

As  almoft  here  fhe  with  her  blifs  doth  meet. 


300  Jldisceilaneous. 


But  when  in  heaven   fhe  fhall   His  eflence  see, 
This   is   her  sovereign  good,  and  perfe6l  blifs, 

Her  longings,  wifhings,  hopes,  all  finifhed  be. 
Her  joys  are   full,   her  motions  reft  in  this. 

There   is  fhe  crowned   with  garlands  of  content  ; 

There  doth   fhe   manna  eat,  and  nedlar  drink : 
That  presence  doth  such   high  delights  present. 

As   never  tongue  could  speak,  nor  heart  could  think. 
Sir  yohn  Dav'ies.      Born  in    15 70. 


YOUTH   AND    AGE. 

THE  seas  are  quiet  when  the  winds  are  o'er, 
So  calm  are  we  when  paffions  are  no  more  ! 
For  then  we   know  how  vain   it  was  to  boaft 
Of  fleeting  things   so  certain  to  be  loft. 

Clouds  of  afFecElion   from  our  younger  eyes 

Conceal  that  emptinefs  which  age  descries  ; 

The  soul's    dark  cottage,  battered  and  decayed. 

Lets  in   new  li2;ht  through  chinks  that  time  has   made. 

Stronger  by  weaknefs,  wiser  men  become 
As  they  draw  near  to  their  eternal   home  ; 


Miscellaneous.  30 1 


Leaving  the  old,   both   worlds  at  once  they   view, 
That   fland   upon  the  threfhold  of  the  new. 

JValler.     Died  in   1687. 


HUMILITY. 

O!   LEARN  that  it  is  only  by  the  lowly 
The  paths  of  peace  are  trod  ; 
If  thou  wouidft  keep  thy  garments  white  and  holy, 
Walk  humbly  with  thy  God. 

The  man  with  earthly  wisdom  high   uplifted 

Is   in  God's  fight  a  fool ; 
But  he  in  heavenly  truth  moft  deeply  gifted, 

Sits  loweft  in  Chrift's  school. 

The  lowly   spirit  God   hath  consecrated 

As   his  abiding  reft ; 
An  angel   by  some  patriarch's  tent  hath  waited, 

When   kings  had  no  such  gueft. 

The  dew  that  never  wets  the  flinty  mountain, 

Falls   in   the   valleys   free  ; 
Bright  verdure  fringes  the  small  desert  fountain. 

But  barren  sand  the  sea. 

Not  in  the  ftately  oak  the  fragrance  dwelleth. 
Which  charms  the  general  wood, 


302  Miscellaneous. 


But  in  the  violet  low,  whose  sweetnefs  telleth 
Its  unseen  neighborhood. 

The  censer  swung  by  the  proud  hand  of  merit. 

Fumes  with  a   fire  abhorred  j 
But  faith's  two  mites,  dropped  covertly,  inherit 

A  bleffing  from  the  Lord. 

Round  lowlinefs  a  gentle  radiance  hovers, 

A  sweet,  unconscious  grace. 
Which,  even   in    fhrinking,  evermore  discovers 

The  brightnefs  on  its  face. 

Where  God  abides,  contentment  is  an  honor. 

Such  guerdon  Meelcnefs  knows  j 
His  peace  within  her,  and  His  smile  upon  her. 

Her  saintly  way  fhe  goes. 

Through   the  ftrait  gate  of  life  fhe  pafles,  ftooping, 

With   sandals  on   her  feet ; 
And  pure-eyed  Graces,  with  linked   palms,  come  trooping 

Their  filler  fair  to  greet. 

The  angels  bend  their  eyes  upon  her  goings. 

And  guard  her  from  annoy ; 
Heaven   fills  her  quiet  heart  with  overflowings 

Of  calm,  celeftial  joy. 

The  Saviour  loves  her,  for  fhe  wears   the  vefture 
With   which   he  walked  on  earth. 


Miscellaneous. 


303 


And  though  her  childlike  glance,  and  ftep  and  gefture, 
He   knows  her  heavenly  birth. 

He  now  beholds  this  seal  of  glory  graven 

On  all  whom  he  redeems, 
And  in  his  own  bright  city,  cryftal-paven, 

On  every  brow  it  gleams. 

The  white-robed  saints,  the  throne-ftars  finging  under. 

Their  ftate  all  meekly  wear ; 
Their    pauselefs     praise    wells     up     from    hearts     which 
wonder 
That  ever  they  came  there. 

Chrijlian  Regijier. 


ANSWER    TO    "THERE'S    NOTHING    BRIGHT    BUT 
HEAVEN." 


AH  !  say  no  more,  there  's  nought  but  heaven, 
That 's  calm,  and   bright,  and  true  ; 
Say  not,  our  only  portion  's  care. 
That  man  is  ever  doomed  to  wear 

The  cyprefs  wreath   of  woe  ; 
Are  there  not  pleasures  of  the  soul 

To  feeble  mortals  given. 
Feelings  so  pregnant  with  delight,  — 
A  joy  so  warm,  so  calm,  so  bright, 

To  man  allied  to   heaven, 


304  Miscellaneous. 


That  the  rapt  spirit  has  forgot 

Its  tenement  of  clay, 
Nor  fondly  wifh'd  its  woes  were  o'er, 
The  confli6t  pafs'd,  and  gained  the   fhore 

Of  never-ending  day  ? 

Oh,  say  no  more,  there  's  nothing  true 

But  the  bright  scenes  of  heaven. 
Oh,  there  is  truth  in  Mercy's  page, 
Directing  youth,  consoling  age. 

Declaring  fm  forgiven. 
Oh,  say  no  more,  there  's  nought  but  heaven. 

That 's  calm,  or  true,  or  bright  ; 
Bright  are  the  beams  the  Saviour  fheds, 
The  radiance  that  the  Gospel  spreads 

Amid  this  realm   of  night  ; 
Though  loud  the  blaft,  though  dark  the  day. 

We  oft  have  peace  at  even  : 
If  earth  can  yield  such  pure  delight. 
Or  blifs  so  sacred  and  so  bright. 

How  calm,  how  true,  how  bright  is  heaven! 

Tappin. 


Miscellaneous.  305 


A   THANKSGIVING   FOR   SETTLED    HEALTH. 

IN  times  of  want  we  feel  what  blifs 
Our  years  of  plenty  be  ; 
When  war  doth  rage,  the  sweets  of  peace 

The  meanefl:  wit  can  see. 
And  when   with   ficknefs  we  are  pain'd, 

We  know  it  juft,   O   Lord! 
To  render  praise  and   thanks   unfeign'd, 
When  health  fhall  be  reftored. 

Sure,  then,  the  many  healthful  days 

And  years  which  I  have  had. 
Deserve  that  hearty  songs  of  praise 

Should  for  the  same  be  made  ; 
And  that  whilft  health  and  ftrength  do  laft, 

I  fhould  the  same  employ 
To  memorize  the  mercies  paft, 

And  those  which  I  enjoy. 

Whilft  others  groan  with  aching  bones. 

With  wounds  or  inward  pains. 
With  gouts,  or  those  tormenting  ftones 

Which   fret  and  rend  the   reins  ; 
Yea,  while  ten  thousands   feel  the  smart 

Which  on  the  fick  doth  seize. 


306  Miscellaneous. 


In  head,  in  body,  and  in  heart, 
I  am  at  perfe6l  ease. 

Lord  !   ever  blefled  be  thy  name. 

For  this  external  grace  ;  , 

Preserve  me  thankful  for  the  same, 
Whilil:  thou  prolongft   my  race. 

And  if  to  my  immortal  blifs 

It  fhall  not  hindrance  be. 
Nor  thou  thereby  due  glory  mifs. 

Thus  healthful  keep  thou  me. 

But  if  my  patience  muft  be  tried 

By  ficknefs  and   by  pain. 
Let  fin   thereby  be  mortified. 

And  virtue  ftrength  obtain. 

Be  pleased  likewise,  that  whatsoe'er 

Thy  wisdom  fhall  impose. 
It  be  no  more  than  I  can  bear. 

Though  ftrong  and  fliarp  it  grows. 

George  Wither.      1588-1667. 


Miscellaneous. 


307 


BEFORE   ENTERING  ON    DOMESTIC    DUTIES. 

OTHOU   that  in  thy  lowly  sojourn  here, 
Wouldft  oft  retire  from  the  throng'd  thoroughfare 
Wouldft  ftay  awhile  Thy  healing  touch,  and  leave 
The  liftening  crowds  that  hung  upon  thy  lips, 
To  {hare   the   meal  domeftic,  and   to  join 
In  social  converse,  'neath  the  quiet  roof 
Of  thy  loved  Lazarus  ;   O !  be  with   me 
Amidft  my  household  duties,  as  thou  wert 
With  his  two  fifters.  —  May  thy  gentle  voice 
Speak  to  my  heart  in  sweet  encouragement 
Or  mild  reproof,  and  let  me  feel  the  gaze 
Of  those  meek  eyes  fix'd  on  my  every  act, 
And  watching  all  I  do.     Grant  me  the  grace, 
Whilft  Martha's  busy  offices  demand 
My  lefTer  care,  to  caft  my  better  thoughts 
Down  at  thy  feet,  to  fit  with  Mary  there. 
And  liften  to  thy  words  of  truth  and  love. 
Teach   me,  with  mind  unruffled  and  serene. 
To  meet  the   hourly  accidents  of  life  ; 
And  let  the  tones  of  gentle   patience  lend 
Their  soft   sweet  mufic  to  my  lighteft  word. 
O  !  may  I  bear  in  mind,  that  from  the  roots 
Of  wither'd   and   neglefted   duties   spring 
The   rankeft  fin-weeds  which   infeft  the  heart ; 


308  Miscellaneous. 


That  wisdom   infinite  has  placed  me  here 

To  work  thy  will,  watch'd  o'er  by  angels'  eyes, 

Cherifh'd  and  cared  for,  not  alone  by  those 

Whom  thou  haft  given  to  tread  life's  path  with   me. 

But  with  a  love   beyond  all  human  ken, 

By  thee  on  whom  my  hopes  of  heaven  depend, 

My  Lord,  my  God,  my  Saviour,  and  my  Friend. 

The  Wife's  Manual. 

SOCIAL   INTERCOURSE. 

OGOD  !  who  on  the  tablets  of  the  heart 
Gazeft  with  thine  all-searching  eye,  and  there 
Doft  read  the  record  of  each  secret  wifh, 
Guard   with  thy  grace  the  inlets  to  my  soul. 
And  chase  away  the  traitor-thoughts  within. 
That  with  temptation   parleying  ftand,  and   fain 
Would  let  in  fin  and  folly.     Make  me  feel 
That  in  the  gay  and  care-forgetting  crowd 
Thou  art  as  near  me  as  in  solitude  ; 
Keep  thou  the  portals  of  my  lips,  left  words 
Of  levity,  or  censure   undeserved. 
Abuse  the  freedom  of  my  mirthful  hours. 
Tinge  my  each  word  and  adlion   with   a  hue 
Of  heart-born  courtesy  and  holy  love. 
That  in  the   use  of  every  social  gift 
The  happinefs  of  others  may  be  mine  ; 


Miscellaneous. 


309 


And  every  effort  which   I   make  to   please 

May  be  unmarr'd  by  envy  or  by  pride. 

And  as  the  glow-worm,  that,  itself  unseen. 

Glads  with  the  lustre  of  its  tiny  lamp 

Its  little  neighborhood  of  blade  and  flower, 

So  grant,  O   Lord,  my  love  of  thee  may  ftiine. 

Not  in  the  loud  profeflion  of  my  faith. 

But  in  the  peace-light  fhed  around  my  path. 

Still  growing  brighteft  in  the  darlceft   hour. 

Rev.  IV.  Calvert. 


THE   WIDOW. 


THY   will  be  done!"    God  of  the  desolate, 
Teach  me,  with  heart  refign'd,  and  calm,  to  say, 
"  Thy  will  be  done  !  "     I  know  it  was  thy  hand 
That  gave  ;     Oh  !   may  I  see  thy  hand  alone 
Reclaiming  that  it  graciously  beftowed. 
Quiet  my  murmuring  thoughts,  ftill  my  regrets. 
How  little  I  deserv'd  my  happy  lot 
Should  laft  so  long  !      But  life   is   now  a  void. 
Void  did  I  say  \   forgive  me,  Lord  ;   for  life 
Is  full  of  duties  flill,  nor  without  joys. 
Have  I  not  round  about  me  those  to  love, 
And  lead  in   holy  paths  ?     Are  there  no  tears 
On  other  cheeks  that  I   may  wipe  away  ? 
I  bear  his  name,  and   I   may   hear  it  blefled 


310  Miscellaneous, 


By  grateful  lips.     The  memory  of  his  kind 

Approving  smile,  will  it  not  glad  each   hour 

Of  cheerful   ftruggle  againft  grief  and  fin  ? 

Guard   me,  and   help  me  on   my  journey  home, 

God  of  the  widow,  and  the  fatherlefs  ! 

May  I   forget  my  own,  my  bitter  woes, 

In   pouring  comfort  into  others'  breafts. 

Far  from  these  lips  be  censure  or  complaint ; 

And  let  me  flrive  by  every  lawful  means 

To  hide  the  faults  of  others,   and  my  grief. 

So  by  my  gladsome  looks  and  happy  tones, 

By  sympathy  in  all  the  gentle  joys 

Of  young  and   merry  hearts,  may  it  appear 

How  bright  and  sunny  is  the  lot  of  those 

Who  have  Thy   love,  a  solace  in  their  woes. 

Who,  clinging  to  Thy  crofs,  their  souls  to  save. 

Can  look  without  one  fhudder  towards  the  grave. 

Rev.  W,  Calvert. 


A  WORKING-HYMN. 

SON  of  the  Carpenter,  receive 
This   humble  work  of  mine  ; 
Worth  to  my  meaneft  labor  give 
By  joining  it  to  thine. 

Servant  of  all,  to  toil  for  man 
Thou  wouldft  not,  Lord,  refuse 


Miscellaneous. 


3i» 


Thy  majefty  did  not  disdain 
To  be  employ'd   for  us. 

Thy  bright  example  I  pursue, 

To  thee  in  all  things  rise, 
And  all  I  think,  or  speak,  or  do. 

Is  one  great  sacrifice. 

Carelefs  thro'  outward  cares  I  go, 

From  all  diftra6lion  free  : 
My  hands  are  but  engag'd  below. 

My  heart  is  ftill  with  thee. 

O   when  wilt  thou,  my  life,  appear! 

Then  gladly  will  I  cry, 
' T  is  done,  the  work  thou  gav'ft  me   here, 

'T  is  finifh'd.  Lord  —  and  die! 


JVeJley. 


GRACE    AFTER    MEAT. 


BLEST  be  the  God,  whose  tender  care 
Prevents   his  children's  cry. 
Whose  pity  providently  near 
Doth  all  our  wants  supply. 

Bleft  be  the  God,  whose  bounteous  ftore. 
These  cheering  gifts  imparts. 


312  Miscellaneous. 


Who  veils  in  bread  the  secret  power 
That  feeds  and  glads  our  hearts. 

Fountain  of  bleflings,  source  of  good. 

To  thee  this  ftrength  we  owe, 
Thou  art  the  virtue   of  our  food, 

Life  of  our  life  below. 

When  fhall  our  souls  regain  the  fkies. 

Thy  heavenly  sweetnefs  prove  : 
Where  joys   in  all  their  fullnefs  rise. 

And  all  our  food  is  love. 

Wejley. 


AT   TABLE, 

FOUNTAIN  of  all  the  good  we  see 
Streaming  from   heaven  above. 
Saviour,  our  faith  we  a6l  on  thee. 
And  exercise  our  love. 

'T  is  not  the  outward   food  we  eat 
Doth  this  new  ftrength  afford, 

'T  is  thou,  whose  presence  makes  it  meat, 
Thou  the  life-giving  word. 

Man  doth  not  live  by  bread  alone  ; 
Whate'er  thou  wilt  can  feed  ; 


Miscellaneous. 


3'3 


Thy  power  converts  the   bread  to  flone, 
And  turns  the  ftone  to  bread. 

Thou  art  our  food  ;  we  tafte  thee  now, 

In   thee  we  move  and  breathe, 
Our   bodies'  only  life  art  thou. 

And  all  befides  is  death. 


Wefley. 


WORSHIP. 

I   WENT  into  the  house  of  prayer, 
'T  was   many  a   mile  away  ; 
I   knew  no  individual   there  — 
I   went  to  hear  them  pray  ; 
And  by  their  supplications  found 
The  place  indeed   was  holy  ground. 

I  did  not  afk  their  creed  or  name, 
' T  was  scarcely  worth  a  care  ; 

It  was  enough,  a  holy  flame 
Impelled  their  souls  to  prayer  ; 

And  in  my  own,  methought  I  found 

A  brother's  love  go  circling  round. 


As  pilgrims  they  themselves  confeft, 
And   ftransers  here  below 


3^4  Miscellaneous. 


To  perfe6l  joy,  and  solid  reft, 

Or —  misanthropic  woe  ! 
And  made  a  humble,  happy  claim 
To   heaven  itself,  in  Jesus'  name. 

They  were  indeed  a  happy  band,  — 

And  they  appeared  to  me 
The  salt  that  purifies  the  land 

Amidft  depravity  ; 
For  to  the   potency  of  prayer, 
We  owe  the  bleffings  that  we  fhare. 

Then  let  us  raise  hosannas  high 

To  God  the  Father's  name. 
Who  bids  our  supplications  fly 

On  love's  triumphant  flame  ; 
And  from  his  throne  above  the  fkies, 
Sends  down  to  earth   such  rich  supplies. 

E.  Dermer 


SON-DAYES. 

BRIGHT    fhadows    of    true    reft !    some    {hoots    of 
bliffb  ; 
Heaven  once  a  week  ; 
The  next  world's  gladneffe  prepofleft  in  this  ; 
A   day  to  seek : 


Miscellaneous. 


315 


Eternity  in  time  ;  the  fteps  by  which 

W'e  climb  above  all  ages  ;   lamps    that  light 

Man  through  his  heap  of  dark  days  ;  and  the  rich 

And   full  redemption  of  the  whole  week's  flight  ! 

The  pulleys  unto  headlong  man;  time's  bower; 

The  narrow  way  ; 
Transplanted   paradise  ;  God's  walking  houre  ; 

The  cool  o'  th'  day ! 
The  creature's  jubile  ;   God's  parle  with  duft  ; 
Heaven  here  ;   man  on  those  hills  of  myrrh  and  flowres  ; 
Angels  descending  ;  the  returns  of  truft  ; 
A  gleam  of  glory  after  six-days-showres! 

The  Churche's  love-feafts  ;  time's  prerogative, 

And  intereft 
Deducted  from  the  whole  ;  the  combs  and  hive, 

And  home  of  refl. 
The  milky-way  chalkt  out  with  suns  ;  a  clue, 
That  guides  through  erring  hours  ;  and  in  full  ftory 
A  tafte  of  heav'n  on  earth  ;  the   pledge  and  cue 
Of  a  full   feafl ;  and  the  out-courts  of  glory. 

Henry   Vaughan.      1 62 1— 1 695. 


3  1 6  Miscellaneous. 


H.   SCRIPTURES. 

WELCOME,  dear  book,  soul's  joy  and  food  I  the 
feaft 
Of  spirits  ;   heav'n   extra6led  lyes  in  thee. 
Thou   art  life's  charter,  the  dove's  spotlefs  neft 

Where  souls  are  hatch'd   unto   eternitie. 
In  thee  the  hidden   ftone,  the  manna  lies  ; 

Thou  art  the  great  elixir  rare  and  choice  j 
The  key  that  opens  to  all   myfteries, 

The  word    in  charadler,  God  in  the  voice. 

Thou  art  the  oyl  and  the  wine-house  ; 
Thine  are  the  present  healing  leaves. 
Blown   from  the  tree  of  life  to  us 

By   His  breath   whom   my  dead  heart  heaves. 
Each  page  of  thine  hath  true  life    in 't. 
And  God's  bright  minde  expreft   in  print. 

Thou  art  the  faithful,    pearly  rock  ; 
The  hive  of  beamy,  living  lights  ; 
Ever  the  same,   whose  diffus'd   flock 
Entire  ftill  wears  out   blackeft  nights. 
Thy  lines  are  rays  the  true  Sun  fhed  ; 
Thy  leaves  are  healing  wings  He  spreads. 

Fa  ugh  an. 


Miscellaneous.  3 1  7 


SABBATH    EVENING. 

IS  there  a  time  when   moments  flow 
More  lovelily  than  all  befide  ? 
It  is,  of  all  the  times  below, 
A   Sabbath  eve  in  summer  tide. 

O  then  the  setting  sun  smiles   fair, 
And  all  below,  and  all  above. 
The  different  forms  of  Nature  wear ; 
One  universal  garb  of  love. 

And  then  the  peace  that  Jesus  beams, 
The  life  of  grace,  the  death   of  fin. 
With   Nature's  placid  woods  and   ftreams, 
Is  peace  without,  and  peace  within. 

Delightful  scene  !  a  world  at  reft, 
A   God  all  love,  no  grief  nor  fear  j 
A  heavenly  hope,  a  peaceful  breaft, 
A  smile  unsullied  by  a  tear ! 

If  heaven  be  ever  felt  below, 
A  scene  so  heavenly   sure  as  this, 
May  cause  a  heart  on  earth  to  know 
Sone  foretafte  of  celeftial   blifs. 


318  Miscellaneous . 


Delightful  hour!  how  soon  will  Night 
Spread  her  dark  mantle  o'er  thy  reign  ; 
And  morrow's   quick  returning  light 
Muft  call  us  to  the  world  again. 

Yet  there  will  dawn  at  laft  the   day, 
A   Sun  that  never  sets  fhall  rise  ; 
Night  will  not  vail  his  ceaselefs  ray, 
The  heavenly  Sabbath  never  dies. 


Edmejio 


-oc^DXti/ao- 


They  affedl 
Truth  in  her  naked  beauty,  and  behold 
Man  with  an  equall  eye,  not  bright  in  gold 
Or  tall  in  title  ;  so  much  him  they  weigh 
As  vertue  raiseth  him  above  his  clay. 
Thus   let  us  value  things  :   and  fmce  we  find 
Time  bends  us  toward  death,  let 's  in  our  mind 
Create  new  youth  ;  and  arme  againft  the  rude 
Aflaults  of  age  ;  that  no  dull  solitude 
O'  th'  country  dead  our  thoughts,  nor  bufie  care 
O'  th'  towne   make  us  not  thmke,  where  now  we  are 
And  whither  we  are  bound.     Time  ne'er  forgot 
His  journey,  though  his  fteps  we  numbered  not ! 

Hab'ington. 


Miscellaneous. 


319 


"  TT^O^  I   have  seen  the  pine, 
JL    Pained  for  its  travels  ore  the  sea, 
Brolcen  with   ftormes  and   age  decline, 
And  in  some  creek  unpittied  rot  away. 

I   have  seene  cedars  fall, 
And   in  their  roome  a  mufhrome  grow  : 
I   have  seene  comets,  threatning  all, 
Vanifli  themselves  :   I  have  seene  princes  so." 


♦©®©*«~ 


"S 


HOULD  I  my  selfe  ingratiate 
T'  a  prince's  smile. 
How  soone  may  death   my  hopes  beguile  ! 
And  fhould  I   farme  the  proudeft  ftate, 
I'me  tennant  to  uncertaine  fate." 


OTHOU  iEternall  banquet!  where 
Forever  we 
May  feede  without  satietie ! 
Who  harmonic  art  to  the  eare  ! 
Who  art,  while  all  things  else  appeare !  " 

Habington.      1 605-1 654, 


320 

Miscellaneous. 

FROM   THE   "CHERUBIC   PH^GRIM.' 

The  Eyes  of  the  Soul. 

r 

WO 

see 

eyes    hath   every  soul ;  one    into    T 

me  (hall 

The 

other 

bends  its  gaze  into  Eternity. 
Hu?nble  and  Free. 

From 

lowly  daifies  learn,   O   men  !    how  ye  may  be 

Both 

good 

and  beautiful,  humble  in  heart  and 
Learn  from  the  Silkworm. 

free. 

O  fh 

ame  ! 

A   silkworm  works  and    spins  till  it 

can  flv, 

And 

thou, 

my  soul,  wilt  flill  on  thine  old  earth-clod   lie. 

God  is  a   Blejfed  Stillnefs. 

We 

pray, 

"  On  earth,  in  Heaven,  O  Lord,  b 

e  done 

thy 

will," 

And 

yet  God  has  no   will,  but  is  forever  ftill. 

I 

Johannes  Angelus 

Sileftus. 

Miscellaneoui. 


321 


FROM   ALGER'S   ORIENTAL   POETRY. 

Tradition  and  Life. 

BE   no  imitator ;   frefhly  a6i:  thy   part  ; 
Through  this  world  be  thou  an  independent  ranger 
Better  is  the   faith  that  springeth   from  thy  heart, 
Than  a  better  faith  belonging;  to  a  ftranger. 

The  Haunt  of  Wisdom. 
Seek  truth  from  thought,  and  not  from  mouldy  books, 

O  fool! 
Look  in  the   fky  to  find  the  moon,  not  in  the  pool. 

Truth  out  of  Convuljion :  from  Dewletschah. 
Whene'er  the  sea  upheaves  its  foaming  hofts, 
Pearl  after  pearl  it  tofles  on  the  coafts. 

Not   Fate^  but   Skill. 
Diving  and  finding  no  pearls  in   the  sea. 
Blame  not  the  ocean,  the  fault  is   in  thee  ! 


Educate   Thyself 
O  square  thyself  for  use  ;  a  flone  that  may 
Fit  in  the  wall,  is  not  left  in  the  way. 


322  Miscellaneous. 


Fount  arid  River. 
The    bad    fount,    which    a    pitcher    can    hide    from    your 

view, 
Feeds    a    ftream    which    an    elephant    scarce    can    wade 

through. 

The   Triple  Murder. 
These  three  men  all  at  once  to  death  the  flander-poison 

burns : 
The  one  who  speaks,  the  one  who  hears,  the  one  whom 

it  concerns. 

The  Ideal  Philosophy.      From  Mah?}ioud. 

Nothing  is  the  mirror,  and    the  world    the  image  in  it  : 
God  the  Ihower  is,  who  fhows  the  vifion  every  minute. 

The  Bitter   Cup   Sweet. 

My  God  once  mixed    a  harfh  cup,  for    me  to  drink  it, 

And  it  was  full  of  acrid  bitternefs  intenseft  ; 

The  black  and  nauseating  draught  did    make  me  fhrink 

from  it. 
And  cry,  "  O  Thou  who  every  draught  alike  dispense^:. 
This  cup  of  anguifh  sore,  bid   me  not  to  quaff  of  it, 
Or  pour  away  the  dregs  and  the  deadlieft   half  of  it  !  " 
Rut  ftill  the  cup  he  held  ;  and  seeing  He  ordained  it, 
One    glance    at    Him,  —  it    turned    to    sweetnefs    as    I 

drained  it. 


Miscellaneous. 


323 


The  Ninth   Paradise. 
In  the  nine  heavens  are  eight  Paradises  ; 
Where  is  the  ninth  one  ?      In  the  human  breaft. 
Only  the  blefled  dwell  in  th'   Paradises, 
But  blelTednefs  dwells  in  the  human   breaft. 
Created  creatures  are  in  th'   Paradises, 
The  uncreated  Maker  in  the  breaft. 
Rather,  O   man,  want  those  eight  Paradises, 
Than  be  without  the  ninth  one  in  thy  breaft. 
Given  to  thee  are  those  eight  Paradises 
When  thou  the  ninth  one   haft  within  thy   breaft. 


The  Unwalled  Mouse  of  God. 
The  holy  Nanac  on  the  ground,  one  day. 
Reclining,  with   his   feet  towards  Mecca,  lay. 
A  pafling  Moflem  prieft,  offended   saw, 
And   flaming  for  the  honor  of  his  law, 
Exclaimed,  "  Base  infidel,  thy  prayers  repeat ! 
Towards  Allah's  house  how  dar'ft  thou   turn  thy  feet  ? '' 
Before  the  Moflem's  fhallow   accents  died. 
The  pious  but  indignant  Nanac  cried, 
"  And  turn  them,  if  thou  canft,  towards  any  spot 
Wherein  the  awful   House  of  God  is  not  !  " 


324  Miscellaneous. 


A    HYMN    WHILST   WE    ARE   WASHING. 

AS  we  by  water  wafh  away 
Uncleannefs  from  our   flefli, 
And  sometimes  often  in  a  day, 
Ourselves  are  fain  to  wafh  : 
So  ev'ry  day,  thoughts,   words,  or  deeds. 

The  soul  do  sully  so, 
That  often   every  day  fhe  needs 
Unto  her  cleanser  go. 

Our   fins  purgation  doth  require, 

Sometime  a  flood  of  tears; 
Sometime  the  painful  purging  fire 

Of  torments,  griefs,  or  fears: 
And  all   this   cleanfing  will  be  loft, 

When  we  our  beft  {hall  do, 
Unlefs  we   by  the   Holy  Ghoft, 

May  be  baptized  too. 

George  TVither. 


Miscellaneous.  325 


FOR   ONE    THAT   HEARS   HIMSELF   MUCH    PRAISED. 

MY   fins  and   follies,  Lord  !   by  thee 
From  others  hidden  are, 
That  such  good  words  are  spoke  of  me. 

As  now  and  then  I   hear ; 
For  sure  if  others  knew   me  such, 

Such  as  myself  I   know, 
I  fhould  have  been  dispraised  as  much 
As  I   am  praised  now. 

The  praise,  therefore,  which   I   have  heard, 

Delights   not  so  my  mind, 
As  those  things  make  my  heart  afeard, 

Which  in   myself  I  find  : 
And   I   had  rather  to  be  blamed, 

So  I  were  blamelefs   made. 
Than   for  much  virtue  to  be  famed. 

When   I   no  virtues  had. 

Though   {landers  to  an  innocent. 

Sometimes  do  bitter  grow, 
Their  bitternefs  procures  content. 

If  clear  himself  he  know. 
And  when  a  virtuous  man   hath  err'd. 

If  praised   himself  he  hear, 


326  Miscellaneous. 

It  makes  him  grieve,  and  more  afeard, 
Than  if  he   flander'd  were. 

Lord  !  therefore  make  my  heart  upright, 

Whate'er  my  deeds  do   seem  ; 
And  righteous  rather  in  Thy   fight, 

Than  in  the  world's    efteem. 
And  if  aught  good  appear  to   be 

In  any  a6l  of  mine. 
Let  thankfuhiefs  be  found  in  me, 

And  all  the  praise  be  Thine. 

George  IVither. 


VIRTUE. 

THRICE  happy  he  whose  name  is  writ  above, 
And  doeth  good  through  gaining  infamy  ; 
Requiteth   evil  turns   with   hearty  love, 
And  recks  not   what  befalls   him  outwardly  ; 

Whose  worth   is  in  himselfe,  and   only  blilTe 
In  his  pure  conscience  that  doth  nought  amifle. 

Who  placeth   pleasure  in  his  purged  soul, 
And   virtuous  life  his  treasure   doth  efteem  ; 
Who  can  his  paflions   mafter  and  controll. 
And  that  true  lordly  manlinefTe  doth  deeme  ; 

Who  from  this  world   himself  hath  clearly  quit, 
Counts  nought  his  own  but  what  lives  in   his  spright. 


Miscellaneous. 


327 


So  when  his  spright  from  this  vain  world   fhall  flit, 

It  hears   all    with   it   whatsoever   was   dear 

Unto   itself,   paffing  in   easy   fit. 

As  kindly   ripen'd  corn  comes  out  of  th'  ear. 
Thus   mindlelTe  of  what   idle   men   will  say 
He  takes  his  own  and  Itilly  goes  his  way." 

True   virtue  to  herself 's   the  bed:  reward. 


Rich   with  her  own,  and  full  of  lively  spirit, 

Nothing:  cafl  down   for  want  of  due  regard. 

Or  'cause  rude  men  acknowledge  not  her   merit ; 

She  knows  her  worth,  and   flock  from   whence  she 
sprung. 

Spreads  fair  without  the   warmth  of  earthly  dung. 


Dewed  with  the  drops  of  heaven  fhall   flourifh  long  ; 

As  long  as  day  and   night  do   fhare  the   fkie, 

And   though   tliat  day  and   night  fhould   faile,  yet   flroiv. 

And   fteddie,   fixed   on   eternitie. 

Shall   bloom   forever.      So  the   soul   fhall   speed, 
That  loveth   virtue  for  no  worldly  meed. 

Though   sooth   to  say,   the  worldly   meed   is   due 
To   her  more  than  to  all  the  world  befide  ; 
Men  ought  do  homage   with  afFe6fions   true, 
And  offer  gifts,  for  God  doth  there  refide  ; 

The  wise  and  virtuous   soul  is  his  own   seat. 
To  such  what  's  given   God  himself  doth  get. 

Dr.   Henry  More.      1614-1687, 


328  Miscellaneous. 


THE   UNITY   OF   THE   SPIRIT. 

THE   Church  of  Chrift  that  he  hath   hallow'd  here 
To  be  his  house,  is  scattered  far  and  near, 
In   North  and   South  and   Eaft  and   Weft  abroad. 
And  yet  in  earth  and   heaven,  through  Chrift  her   Lord, 

The  Church  is  one. 

One  member  knoweth  not  another  here, 
And  yet  their  fellowftiip   is  true  and  near, 
One  is  their  Saviour,  and  their  Father  one, 
One  Spirit  rules  them,  and  among  them  none 

Lives  to  himself. 

They  live  to   Him  who  bought  them  with   his  blood. 
Baptized  them  with   his  Spirit  pure  and  good. 
And  in  true  faith  and  ever-burning  love 
Their  hearts  and   hope  ascend  to  seek  above 

The  eternal  Good. 

O   Spirit  of  the  Lord,  all  life   is  thine. 

Now   fill  thy  Church   with  life  and   power  divine. 

That  many  children  may  be  born  to  thee. 

And  spread  thy  knowledge  like  the   boundlefs  sea, 

To  Chrift's  great  praise. 

A.   G.   Spangenberg.      1747. 


INDEX    TO    FIRST    LINES. 


PAGE 

Abide  with  me.     Fast  falls  the  eventide 163 

Again,  how  can  she  but  immortal  be 297 

A  garden  so  well  watered  before  morn 154 

A  gentle  angel  walketh  throughout  a  world  of  woe 135 

Ah  !  say  no  more  there  's  nought  but  heaven        303 

Alas  these  visits  rare  and  rude 74 

A  little  longer  yet,  a  little  longer 237 

A  little  while,  and  every  fear 141 

Allah,  Allah  !  cried  the  sick  man 4 

All  praise  and  thanks  to  God  most  High 218 

Alone  with  God  !  day's  craven  cares 157 

A  man  there  came,  whence  none  could  tell 72 

And  is  there  care  in  Heaven  ?  and  is  there  love 33 

Angels  shall  free  the  feet  from  stain 138 

Another  day  is  numbered  with  the  past 176 

Another  hand  is  beckoning  us 262 

Arise  !  ye  lingering  saints,  arise  ! 42 

As  ere  I  down  am  couched  there        23 

A  strong  and  mailed  angel        147 

As  virtuous  men  pass  mildly  away 249 

As  we  by  water  wash  away 324 

Awake,  my  soul  !  awake,  mine  eyes  ! 172 


33^  Index. 

PAGE 

Be  no  imitator;  freshly  act  thy  part 321 

Beyond  the  smiling  and  the  weeping 235 

Blest  be  the  God,  whose  tender  care 311 

Breathe  thoughts  of  pity  o'er  a  brother's  fall  32 

Brief  life  is  here  our  portion 279 

Bright  shadows  of  true  rest  ! 314 

But  what  or  who  are  we,  alas        21 

Calm  on  the  listening  ear  of  night       ...          179 

Can  angel  spirits  need  repose        285 

Children  of  God,  who  pacing  slow 123 

Come,  blessed  of  my  heavenly  Father,  come  ! 54 

Come  forth  !  come  on,  with  solemn  song  !        252 

Come,  oh  !  come,  with  sacred  lays 213 

Come  to  the  morning  prayer 155 

Companion  none  is  like 20 

Courage,  my  sorely-tempted  heart  ! 120 

Day  by  day  the  manna  fell 79 

Dear  Jesus,  give  me  patience  here 133 

Dear,  secret  greenness  !  nurst  below 12 

Deathless  principle,  arise  ! 258 

Discourage  not  thyself,  my  soul 86 

Enthroned  upon  a  hill  of  light 260 

For  I  have  seen  the  pine 319 

Fountain  of  all  the  good  we  see 312 

Give  me  my  scallop-shell  of  quiet 21 

Gloomy  night  embraced  the  place 180 

Good  night !  a  word  so  often  said     ...          266 

Grace  does  not  steel  the  faithful  heart 107 

Grand  rough  old  Martin  Luther •     .     .     .  56 


Index. 


33' 


PAGE 

Happy  me  !   O  happy  sheep 215 

Hark!  hark!   the  voice  of  ceaseless  praise 282 

He  bids  us  come  ;  His  voice  we  know loi 

Here  may  the  band  that  now  in  triumph  shines       287 

He  that  from  dross  would  win  the  precious  ore 194 

High  hopes  that  burned  like  stars  sublime 142 

His  courtiers  of  the  caliph  crave         39 

How  good  a  God  have  we  ! 177 

How  happy  is  it  and  how  sweet 28 

I  dwell  in  grace's  courts 83 

I  fashioned  in  my  soul  a  fantasy 267 

If  God  is  mine,  then  present  things          223 

If  joy  be  made  when  men  are  born        257 

If  virtue  be  thy  guide 8 

I  journey  through  a  desert  drear  and  wild 202 

I  love  (and  have  some  cause  to  love)  the  earth 209 

I  mourn  no  more  my  vanished  years 144 

In  all  extremes,  Lord,  thou  art  still 210 

In  the  silent  midnight  watches 187 

In  times  of  want  we  feel  what  bliss 305 

In  trouble  and  in  grief,  O  God 115 

In  vain  do  men 22 

I  say  to  thee,  do  thou  repeat 104 

Is  there  a  time  when  moments  flow 317 

Is  this  a  fast,  to  keep 54 

It  is  not  they  who  idly  dwell 46 

I  went  into  the  house  of  prayer 313 

"  Jesus'  hour  is  not  yet  come  " 140 

Jesus  immutably  the  same 190 

Jesus,  my  Saviour,  look  on  me 197 

Jesus!  the  ladder  of  my  faith 191 

Joy  of  my  life,  while  left  me  here 64 


332  Index. 

PAGE 

Late  to  our  town  there  came  a  maid 68 

Let  them  that  would  build  castles  in  the  air 151 

Life's  mystery  —  deep,  restless  as  the  Ocean 207 

Lift  not  thou  the  wailing  voice 254 

Light  of  light  enlighten  me        233 

Long  did  I  toil,  and  knew  no  earthly  rest 201 

Long  plunged  in  sorrow,  I  resign 119 

Lord,  I  have  lain 48 

Lord,  it  belongs  not  to  my  care 109 

Lord,  shall  we  grumble  when  thy  flames  do  scourge  us  ?        .     .  114 

Love  divine  its  word  hath  spoken 26 

Mortal!  on  our  azure  pathway 61 

My  Father  is  the  mighty  Lord 231 

My  God  !    J  know  that  I  must  die 243 

My  God  with  me  in  every  place  ! 227 

My  hope  is  built  on  nothing  less 195 

My  Jesus,  as  thou  wilt        116 

My  little  maiden  of  four  years  old 34 

My  sins  and  follies  Lord!  by  thee 325 

My  soul,  there  is  a  countrie 2 

My  soul,  why  dost  thou  in  my  breast 192 

My  stock  lies  dead  ;  and  no  increase        165 

No  outward  mark  we  have  to  know 38 

Not  as  all  other  women  are 65 

Nothing  but  leaves  ;  the  Spirit  grieves 49 

Nothing  resting  in  its  own  completeness 127 

Now  darkness  over  all  is  spread 121 

Now  let  our  souls  on  wings  sublime 242 

Now  that  the  sun  is  gleaming  bright 169 

O  Father-eye  that  hath  so  truly  watch'd 232 

Of  life's  past  woes  the  fading  trace 70 

O  for  a  heart  to  praise  my  God 159 


Inde 


333 


PAGE 

Oft  have  I  wished  a  traveller  to  be 17 

O  God  !  who  on  the  tablets  of  the  heart 308 

O  hearts  that  never  cease  to  yearn 264 

Oh  !  that  mine  eye  might  closed  be 160 

O  joyes!  infinite  sweetness  !  with  what  flovvres 153 

O  !  learn  that  it  is  only  by  the  lowly 301 

O  love  divine,  how  sweet  thou  art  ! 3 

O  love  divine,  that  stooped  to  share 171 

O  make  our  house  Thy  sanctuary 161 

One  sweetly  welcome  thought 290 

One  time  I  was  allowed  to  steer 150 

O  not  to  fill  the  mouth  of  fame         45 

O  peace  of  God,  sweet  peace  of  God  ! iii 

O  say  not  we  through  life  must  struggle 51 

O  silence  deep  and  strange  ! 170 

O!   that  in  unfettered  union 269 

O  think  that,  while  you  're  weeping  here 256 

O  Thou  by  long  experience  tried 226 

O  thou  aeternall  banquet  !  where 319 

O  Thou,  on  earth  beloved,  adored 280 

O  Thou  that  in  thy  lowly  sojourn  here 307 

Our  Father 166 

Our  Lord  and  brother  who  put  on 182 

Our  Saviour  (pattern  of  true  holiness) 155 

Over  the  river  they  beckon  to  me 277 

O  \\ay  for  all  that  live  ! 206 

O  !  years  gone  down  into  the  past 80 

Pain's  furnace-heat  within  me  quivers 136 

Peace  has  unveiled  her  smiling  face no 

Peace,  muttering  thoughts!        75 

Peace,  peace  ;  it  is  not  so    ...     ~. 124 

Poor  soul,  the  centre  of  my  sinful  earth 15 

Prayer  —  the  church's  banquet ;  angel's  age 152 


334  Index. 

PAGE 

Quietly  rest  the  woods  and  dales 1-74 

Say,  Reader!  canst  thou  bear  and  not  complain 89 

See  the  Day-Spring  from  afar         204 

She  stood  outside  the  gate  of  heaven 35 

Should  I  my  selfe  ingratiate 310 

Sleep,  drowsy  sleep !  come  close  mine  eyes 173 

Some  think  there  is  no  earthly  state 76 

Sometime,  O  Lord  !  at  least  in  show 16 

Son  of  the  Carpenter,  receive          310 

Soul's  joy,  now  I  am  gone 248 

Spirit  divine!  attend  our  prayer 162 

Stand  but  your  ground,  your  ghostly  foes  will  fly 203 

Still  hope  !  still  act !      Be  sure  that  life 60 

Sweet  babe,  she  glanced  into  our  world  to  see 255 

Sweet-voiced  Hope,  thy  fine  discourse 90 

Sweet  voices  !  seldom  mortal  ear 128 

That  so  thy  blessed  birth,  O  Christ 57 

That  which  makes  us  have  no  need 6 

The  Church  of  Christ  that  he  hath  hallow'd  here 328 

The  golden  palace  of  my  God 274 

The  lopped  tree  in  time  may  grow  again 149 

The  modest  front  of  this  small  floor 71 

The  night  was  made  for  cooling  shade 93 

The  pilgrim  and  stranger,  who,  through  the  day 53 

There  are  who  fear  thy  summons.  Death  !        241 

There  is  an  eye  that  never  sleeps 156 

There  is  a  plant  that  in  its  cell        30 

There  is  a  pure  and  peaceful  wave 13 

The  seas  are  quiet  when  the  winds  are  o'er 300 

The  Son  of  God  goes  forth  to  war 183 

They  affect  Truth  in  her  naked  beauty 318 

They  gave  to  Thee         .     .     .     .     • i 

This  is  the  Sabbath  day! 168 


Index. 


335 


PAGE 

This  is  the  ship  of  pearl,  which,  poets  feign 58 

Thou  art  my  all  —  to  Thee  I  flee 220 

Thou,  Lord,  who  rear'st  the  mountains  height 229 

Thrice  happy  he  whose  name  is  writ  above 326 

"Thy  will  be  done,"  God  of  the  desolate .309 

Till  love  appear,  we  live  in  anxious  doubt 25 

'T  is  but  one  family, — the  sound  is  balm 251 

'Tis  not  the  skill  of  human  art 37 

Tremble  not,  though  darkly  gather   ...         114 

'T  was  when  the  sea's  tremendous  roar 1 05 

Two  eyes  hath  every  soul  —  one  into  Time  shall  see    ....     320 
Two  worlds  there  are.     To  one  our  eyes  we  strain 291 

Unchangeable,  Almighty  Lord 134 

Unto  the  glory  of  thy  Holy  Name 177 

Up,  Christian,  up  ! — and  sleep'st  thou  still  ? 44 

Up  to  those  bright  and  gladsome  hills 212 

Veil,  Lord,  mine  eyes  till  she  be  past 10 

Wait!  for  the  day  is  breaking 139 

Walk  in  the  light !  —  So  shah  thou  know 9 

Watcher,  who  wakest  by  the  bed  of  pain 196 

We  ask  for  peace,  O  Lord  !           95 

Welcome,  dear  book,  soul's  joy  and  food 316 

What  are  we  set  on  earth  for  ?      Say,  to  toil 113 

What  cheering  words  are  these 99 

Whate'er  my  God  ordains  is  right 102 

What  mean  ye  by  this  wailing        246 

What  pleases  God,  O  pious  soul 96 

What  shall  I  do  lest  life  in  silence  pass  r 11 

What  though  the  comforts  of  the  light 222 

When  all  the  year  our  fields  are  fresh  and  green         1 25 

When,  before,  my  God  commanded      .          224 

When  I  can  trust  my  all  with  God          131 


336 


Inde 


PAGE 

When  our  purest  delights  are  nipt  in  the  blossom 188 

When  tempests  toss  and  billows  roll 284 

When  the  death-dews  dim  my  eyes 275 

When  Thou  shalt  please  this  soul  to  enthrone 239 

When  words  are  weak  and  foes  encount'ring  strong       ....  87 

When  we  cannot  see  our  way 100 

Whilst  Andrew,  as  a  fisher,  sought 185 

Whither,  O  whither  should  I  fly 189 

Who  keepeth  not  God's  word,  yet  sailh 41 

Why  dost  thou  talk  of  death,  laddie  ? 50 

Why  doth  ambition  so  the  mind  distresse '8 

Why  longed  Paul  to  be  dissolv'd 245 

Without  the  smile  of  God  upon  the  soul 228 

With  tearful  eyes  I  look  around 199 

Ye  dainty  mosses,  lichens  gray 240 

Yes!  our  Shepherd  leads  with  gentle  hand 186 


'■i 

il 

W'Ji 


